Part 58 (2/2)
”No, there isn't.” She scrubbed her hands dry on a dish towel-which Dean retrieved to hold, two-fingered, with the sweater-and scooped Austin up into her arms. ”I can't get out of that town she's built.”
”The wardrobe Kingston?” Dean asked.
”Not quite Kingston,” Claire told him bitterly. ”There's a camp of killer girl guides to the north. When I take the bridge over the narrows and go east, I get hit with a snowstorm I can't get through. To the west there's a military academy. And south...”
”Un moment,” Jacques interrupted. ”Why can you not get by a military academy?”
”It's the men in uni...”
Claire put her hand over the cat's muzzle. ”They think I'm one of their teachers and I'm AWOL. Attempting that route'll only get me stuffed into an ugly uniform and thrown in the brig until I agree to teach two cla.s.ses in military history.”
”The sea's to the south,” Dean said. ”What about one of the s.h.i.+ps?”
”Get on a s.h.i.+p crewed by the Historian's people?” Claire shook her head. ”I don't think so. It'd be faster just to drown myself and save them the trouble.”
”Austin thinks you're trying too hard.”
”Does he? Interesting he should know so much about a place he's never been.” The cat in her arms became very intent on cleaning between the pads of a front paw. ”No, it's obvious. I can't get to the Historian, and this...” She stared down at the jumble of letters and the sludge of the journal. Her shoulders slumped. ”... this is less than useless.”
”But what about studying the actual, you know, spell?”
”What about it?” She'd been spending an hour with Sara every morning and, so far, she'd developed an allergy to dust. Her ten minutes every other afternoon, the longest she could spend so close to h.e.l.l and a running monologue she couldn't shut off, had taught her a number of things she'd have rather not known about the Spanish Inquisition, World War II, and the people who program prime time TV but nothing about how to deal with the unique situation surrounding the site. ”It's time I faced it; I'm going to be stuck here for the rest of my life.”
After a moment, when the silence in the kitchen stopped ringing to the slam of a metaphorical door, Jacques sighed and said, ”Would that be so bad, cherie?”
Claire paused on the verge of plunging into a good long wallow in self-pity, realizing he was actually asking. Would it be so bad to spend the rest of your life here with me? ”You're missing the point, Jacques. If I were needed to seal the hole, doomed to become an eccentric recluse years before my time, it'd be different, at least I'd be doing something useful. Here...” A toss of her head managed to take in the entire hotel. ”... I'm a pa.s.sive observer, watching a system I can't affect, doing sweet d.i.c.k all. It's like, like having last year's Cy Young winner sitting in the bullpen in case one of the starters blows a rotator cuff.” The ghost stared at her in bewilderment. ”And that means?”
”It's baseball,” Dean told him before Claire could explain. ”It means she feels her abilities are wasted here.”
”Wasted?” Jacques repeated. ”Here where there is a hole to h.e.l.l in the bas.e.m.e.nt and unefemme mauvaise asleep upstairs? If there is something that goes wrong here...”
DEATH! DESTRUCTION!.
A FIVE HUNDRED CHANNEL UNIVERSE!.
”... your, what you call, abilities will not be wasted, cherie.”
”But if nothing goes wrong...”
”We should all be so lucky,” Austin interrupted, jumping out of her arms. He checked the dry food in his bowl and sat, tail wrapped around his toes. ”You know this place needs to be monitored.”
She waved a dismissive hand. ”Well, yes, but...”
”And since you've been summoned here, this is where you need to be.”
”That's the theory, but...”
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