"This is going to really add up," he persisted unwisely.
"I get get it," I said, trying unsuccessfully to keep my cool. "I it," I said, trying unsuccessfully to keep my cool. "I get get the concept. Food costs the concept. Food costs money. money. Lots Lots of food costs of food costs lots lots of money. Just bring us what we ordered. Please." of money. Just bring us what we ordered. Please."
Jason looked at me stiffly and stalked away toward the kitchen.
"I love this place," Fang said with a straight face.
"Did we order too much?" Angel asked.
"No," I said. "It"s fine. I guess they"re not used to hearty eaters."
An underling brought us two baskets of bread and set out small dishes of olive oil. Even she seemed skeptical.
My fingers curled into claws on the white tablecloth. And it all kind of went downhill from there.
104.
"Good afternoon." A man in a suit and tie had materialized at my elbow. Jason was with him.
"h.e.l.lo," I said warily.
"I am the manager. Is there something I can help you with?" he asked.
Was this a trick question? "Well, I don"t think so," I said. "Unless the kitchen is out of something we ordered."
"Yes, well," said the manager. "You seem to have ordered an unusual quant.i.ty of food. We wouldn"t want to be wasteful with it, or present you with a shocking bill because your eyes were bigger than your stomachs." He gave a small artificial laugh.
"Well, that is just so sweet of you," I said, close to my breaking point. "But we"re pretty hungry. It seems like we should just order and get what we ordered, you know?"
This didn"t go over as well as you would think.
The manager took on a look of forced patience. "Perhaps you would be happier in some other restaurant," he said. "Broadway is nearby."
I couldn"t believe this. "No freaking duh, duh," I snapped, finally losing it. "But we"re in in this one and we"re this one and we"re hungry. hungry. Now, I have the money, we brought our appet.i.tes with us; are you going to give us what we ordered or not?" Now, I have the money, we brought our appet.i.tes with us; are you going to give us what we ordered or not?"
The manager looked like he had just sucked on a lemon. "Not, I believe," he said, signaling to a burly guy loitering by the doors. I believe," he said, signaling to a burly guy loitering by the doors.
Great, just great. I rubbed my forehead.
"This is stupid," Iggy said angrily. "Let"s just split. Ga.s.ser, we"ll go someplace that isn"t run by n.a.z.is, okay?"
"Okay," said the Gasman uncertainly.
Angel looked up at the manager. "Jason thinks you"re full of hot air and that you smell like a sissy," she said. "And what"s a himbo? himbo?"
Jason stifled a choking sound and turned red. The manager turned to glare at him.
"Fine," I said, standing up and throwing my napkin down. "We"re going. The food"s probably lousy here, anyway."
That was when the cops showed up.
Who called the cops?
Were they real cops?
I wasn"t planning to stay around and ask them.
105.
Remember how the kitchen was going to provide a useful escape route? That would have worked great if the cops hadn"t split up, two coming in the front, two more coming in through the-you guessed it-kitchen.
All around us, tables of people were staring openmouthed. This was probably the most exciting thing that had happened to them all week.
"Up and away," Fang said, and I nodded reluctantly.
Nudge and Iggy looked surprised, Gazzy grinned, and Angel got that determined look on her face.
"Right, kids," said a female cop, weaving her way through the tables. "You have to come with us. We"ll call your folks down at the station."
Jason shot me a superior smile, and suddenly I was furious. How hard would it be for someone to cut us just one break? Without stopping to think, I s.n.a.t.c.hed up the bowl of olive oil and upturned it on his head. His mouth opened in an O O as pale green oil streaked down his face. as pale green oil streaked down his face.
If that surprised him, what happened next would rock his world.
Moving fast, as only a mutant bird kid could, I jumped up on a chair, stepped onto our table, then threw myself into the air, snapping my wings open and pushing down hard. I dropped alarmingly toward the ground-hadn"t had a running takeoff, which is always best-but surged upward again with the next stroke and rose toward the high raftered ceiling.
Angel joined me, then Iggy, the Gasman, Nudge, and Fang.
Looking down, I couldn"t help laughing at everyone"s faces. "Astonished" doesn"t cover it. They were stunned, dumbstruck, completely freaked out.
"Jerk!" the Gasman yelled, and pelted the manager with pieces of bread.
Fang was circling the ceiling, looking for a way out. I saw that the cops had started to recover and were fanning out.
I won"t lie to you-it was hilarious. Yes, we were in trouble, yes, this was a disaster, and so on and so forth, but I have to say, seeing all those upturned faces, the looks, was about the best thing that had happened to us since we"d come to New York.
"Up here!" Fang shouted, and pointed to one of the stained-gla.s.s skylights.
"Come on, guys!" I yelled, just as I realized that flashes from cameras were going off-seriously bad news. "Let"s go!" "Let"s go!"
Fang ducked his head, covered it with his arms, and flew straight up through the window. It burst with a rainbow-colored crash, and bits of gla.s.s sprinkled down.
Iggy was right behind Nudge, his fingers brushing her ankle, and they flew through next, tucking their wings in at the last second to fit.
"Angel, go!" I ordered, and she shot through, her small white wings looking just like Celeste"s. "Ga.s.ser! Move it!" I saw him swoop down one last time to grab someone"s abandoned dessert. Shoving an entire eclair into his mouth, he nodded and aimed himself through the window. I went last, and then I was in the open air, stretching my wings, filling my lungs. I knew we had just made a crucial, devastating mistake and that we"d have to pay for it.
But you know what? It was almost worth it.
The looks looks on all those faces . . . on all those faces . . .
106.
"To the trees," I told Fang, and he nodded, making a big circle to head north. It was a hazy day, but we weren"t high enough to be out of sight. I hoped no one was looking up. Yeah, right.
We dropped down into a tall maple, breathing hard.
"That went well," said Fang, brushing gla.s.s dust off his shoulders.
"It was my fault," said the Gasman. He had chocolate on his face. "I"m the one who wanted to go there."
"It was their fault, Gazzy," I said. "I bet those weren"t even real cops. They had an eau de School air about them."
"You didn"t think before you dumped the olive oil on the waiter, did you?" Fang asked.
I scowled at him.
"I"m still . . ." Nudge began, then let her voice trail off. I"m guessing she was about to say "hungry," but then realized it wasn"t a good time.
But we were were still hungry. We still hungry. We did did have to have food. As soon as my adrenaline calmed down, I would go find a grocery store or something. have to have food. As soon as my adrenaline calmed down, I would go find a grocery store or something.
"People were taking pictures," Iggy said.
"Yeah," I said miserably. "As an unqualified disaster, this ranks right up there."
"And it"s getting worse," said a smooth voice. said a smooth voice.
I jumped about a foot in the air, then clutched my branch and looked down.
Our tree was surrounded by Erasers.
Without meaning to, I shot a stricken glance at Iggy: He was usually our early-warning system. If he hadn"t heard these guys coming, then they"d materialized out of nowhere.
One Eraser stepped forward, and I caught my breath. It was Ari. It was Ari.
"You keep showing up like a bad penny," I said.
"I was about to say the same thing to you," he replied with a feral smile.
"I remember back when you were three years old," I went on conversationally. "You were so cute-before you got huge and wolfy."
"Like you ever paid attention to me," he said, and I was surprised to hear sincere bitterness in his voice. "I was trapped in that place too, but you shut me out."
My mouth dropped open. "But you were normal," I blurted. "And Jeb"s son."
"Yeah, Jeb"s son," he snarled. "Like he even knows I"m alive. What did you think happened to me while you were off playing house with my my father? Did you think I just disappeared?" father? Did you think I just disappeared?"
"Okay, there"s one one knot unraveled," Fang muttered under his breath. knot unraveled," Fang muttered under his breath.
"Ari, I was ten years old," I said slowly. "Is all this back history why you"re tracking us now? Why you"re trying to kill kill us?" us?"
"Of course not." Ari spit on the ground. "I"m tracking you "cause that"s my job. The back history is helping me enjoy it." He smirked.
I shot him the bird. (Get it? I I shot him the-never mind.) shot him the-never mind.) He was morphing, and when he smiled, his muzzle seemed to split in half, like a dog"s. From behind his back he pulled something small, with brown fur and two white- "Celeste!" Angel cried, and started to scramble down.
"Angel, no!" I shouted, and Fang yelled, I shouted, and Fang yelled, "Stay put!" "Stay put!"
But my baby jumped, landing lightly on the ground a few feet from Ari.
The other Erasers surged forward, but Ari snapped up his hand to hold them back. They stopped, coiled tightly, their cold, wolfish eyes locked on Angel.
Ari shook Celeste playfully, and Angel stepped forward.
I dropped down to the ground, adrenaline pouring into my veins. Again the Eraser team lunged, and again Ari held them back.
"Touch her and I"ll kill you," I promised, my hands curled into fists.
Ari smirked, his dark curly hair catching the last bit of afternoon sun. He shook Celeste again, and Angel quivered by my side.
"Give me the bear," Angel said, low and intense.
Ari laughed.
Angel took a half step forward, but I grabbed her collar.
"Give. Me. The. Bear." Angel sounded odd, not like herself, and she was staring intently into Ari"s eyes. His smile faded, and a look of confusion crossed his face. I remembered how Angel had influenced the woman to buy Celeste for her.
"You"re-" Ari began, then seemed to choke slightly, coughing, putting his hand to his throat. "You"re-"
"Drop the bear now, now," Angel said, hard as concrete.
Seemingly against his will, Ari"s clawed, powerful hand unclenched, and Celeste fell to the ground.
Almost faster than my eyes could follow, Angel s.n.a.t.c.hed Celeste and leaped back up into the tree.
I blinked and wondered if I looked as surprised as Ari did.
The other Erasers sprang into motion, as if it had taken them a few seconds to realize Angel was gone. Ari"s arm shot out, and an Eraser crashed into it.
"You have your orders!" he barked at the team. "Don"t ever question them!" He turned back to look at me thoughtfully. "You can"t question them," he said in a normal tone, speaking directly to me. "Even if they seem stupid. Even if you"d rather just rip the flock apart."
An Eraser made an eager, hungry sound, and it was all I could do not to shudder.
Ari leaned closer to me, as if catching my scent, like prey. "Your day is coming, bird girl," he whispered. "And I"m going to finish you off myself."