(Calm down, dragonfly-)
(Don't call me that! How can you just-just sit there... and not care? What kind of person are you?)
And then-Angel's voice changed. He didn't get hysterical or agitated; it was much worse. His voice became calmer. More melodious. Pleasant.
(I'm just dispensing justice. It's what angels do, you know.)
Icy horror swept over Gillian.
He sounded insane.
"Oh, God," she said, and she said it out loud. David looked at her.
"Hey-are you okay?"
She scarcely heard him. She was thinking with fevered intensity: (I don't know what you are, but you are not an angel.)
(Gillian, listen to me. We don't have to fight. I love you-)
(Then tell me how to fix Tanya!)
Silence.
(I'll find out myself. I'll go back to Melusine-)
(No!)
(Then tell me! Or heal Tanya yourself if you're a real angel!)
A pause. Then: (Gillian, I've got an idea. A way to make David love you more.)
(What are you talking about?)
(We need to give him a near-death experience. Then he'll be able to truly understand you. We need to make him die.)
Everything blurred. Gillian knew they were nearing Somerset, they were on familiar streets. But for a moment her vision went completely gray and sparkling.
"Gillian!" A hand was on hers, a real hand, steadying the wheel. "Are you all right? Do you want me to drive?"
"I'm okay." Her vision had cleared. She just wanted to get home. She had to get to that shoe box and fix
the spell on Tanya somehow. She had to get home ... to safety...
But nowhere was safe.
(Don't you understand?) The voice was soft and insidious in her ear. (David can never really be like you
until he's died the way you have. We have to make him die-)
"No!" She realized she was speaking aloud again. "Stop talking to me! Go away!"
David was staring at her. "Gillian-"
(I don't want to hurt you, Gillian. Only him. And he'll come back, I promise. He might be a little different.
But he'll still love you.)
Different... David's body. Angel wanted David's body. As David left, Angel would take possession....
They were almost home. But she couldn't get away from the voice. How do you get away from something that's in your own mind? She couldn't shut it out. ...
(Just let go, Gillian. Let me take over. I'll drive for you. I love you, Gillian.)
"No!" She was panting, her hands gripping the steering wheel so hard it hurt. The word came out jerkily.
"David! You have to drive. I can't-"
(Relax, Gillian. You won't be harmed. I promise.)
And she couldn't let go of the steering wheel. The voice seemed to be inside her body, diffusing through her muscles. She couldn't take her foot off the accelerator.
"Gillian, slow down!" David was yelling now. "Look out!"
(It will only take a second...)
Gillian's world had been switched into an old-time movie. The flickering black-and-white kind. With each frame, the telephone pole in front of her got bigger and bigger. It was happening very slowly, but at the same time with utter inevitability. They were rushing oh-so-slowly toward that pole, and they were going to hit. On the right side of the car, where David was sitting.
(No! I'll hate you forever...)
She screamed it in her mind and the last word seemed to echo endlessly. There was time for that.
And then there was a loud sound and darkness.
"Can I see him?"
"Not yet, honey." Her mother scooted the plastic chair closer to the emergency room bed. "Probably not tonight."
"But I have to."
"Gillian, he's unconscious. He wouldn't even know you were there."
"But I have to see him." Gillian felt the hysteria swelling again, and she damped her mouth shut. She didn't want a shot, which is what the nurses had said they were going to give her when she started screaming earlier.
She had been here for hours. Ever since the cars with the flashing lights came and pried the station wagon door open and pulled her out. They'd pulled David out, too. But while she had been completely unhurt-"A mirade! Not even a scratch!" the paramedic had said to her mother-David had been unconscious. And had stayed that way ever since.
The emergency room was cold and it didn't seem to matter how many heated blankets they wrapped around her. Gillian kept shivering. Her hands were blue-white and pinched looking.
"Daddy's coming home," her mother said, stroking her arm. "He's taking the first plane he could get.
You'll see him tomorrow morning."
Gillian shivered. "Is this the same hospital- where Tanya Jun is? No, don't ask. I don't really want to know." She stuck her hands under her armpits. "I'm so cold..."
And alone. There was no soft voice hi her head. And that was good, because, God, the last thing she wanted was Angel-or rather that thing, whatever it was, that monster that had called itself an angel.
But it was strange after so long. To be all alone... and not know where he might be lurking. He could be listening to her thoughts right now...
"I'll get another blanket." The nurse had shown her mother the heated closet. "If you could just lie down, honey, maybe you'd feel like sleeping a little."
"I can't sleep! I have to go see David."
"Hon, I already told you. You're not going to see him tonight."
"You said I might not get to see him. You didn't say I wouldn't! You only said probably!" Gillian's voice was rising, getting more shrill, and there was nothing she could do about it. The tears were coming, too, flooding down uncontrollably. She was choking on them.
A nurse came hurrying in, the white curtains around the bed swirling. "It's all right; it's natural," she said softly to Gillian's mother. And to Gillian: "Now, just lean over a little-hold still. A little pinch. This is something to help you relax."
Gillian felt a sting at her hip. A short time later everything got blurry and the tears stopped.
She woke up in her own bed. It was morning. Pale sunlight was shining full in the window. Last night...
oh, yes. She could vaguely remember her mom and Mrs. Beeler, their next-door neighbor, leading her from the hospital to Mrs.