Read Metawars: The Complete Series: Trance, Changeling, Tempest, Chimera Online
Authors: Kelly Meding
“Can I at least say be careful?” he asked.
“You can say it,” I replied. “But I already knew it.” He finally smiled, and my annoyance melted. “Have fun with Simon,” I said.
“An afternoon reading files and inspecting dead bodies.” He rolled his eyes. “What could be more fun?”
Thirteen
Mallory’s Table
A
fter stopping three times for directions, I arrived at the diner twenty minutes late. Everyone in Studio City had heard of Mallory’s Table, but no one knew the exact street name or block number. I drove past it twice before spotting the hole in the wall, tucked between a Laundromat and an adult-video store, bordering the hospitable part of the neighborhood. I found a public parking lot two blocks down and ran the entire way back.
The exterior looked like nothing more than a simple storefront. Inside, the ambience assaulted me the moment I entered. The walls were painted a rich amber, accented with deep burgundy curtains and carpeting. Fake mahogany tables and chairs were set with small lamps, each mosaic shade different from the one next to it. So much elegance, completely unknown from the outside.
I spotted Noah in the back, hunched over a mug of coffee. Judging by the empty sugar and creamer packets, he’d been waiting and drinking for a while. I bypassed the waitress
and dashed over to his table, red-faced from both running and embarrassment.
He looked up and a grin lit his face. “Hey,” he said, bolting to his feet, “I thought you changed your mind.”
“No, just work.” We had an awkward moment, caught between issuing a handshake or a friendly hug. In the end, he pulled out my chair and I slid in.
“How’s Trance doing?” he asked as he sat across from me.
“Better. She could get out of ICU as soon as tonight if she keeps improving.”
“That’s great news.”
A pink-haired waitress snapped her gum as she approached the table and grinned over the edge of her wrinkled notepad.
“Can I getcha a drink?” she asked.
“Iced tea, please,” I said.
“Sure.” She scribbled on her notepad. “Appetizer to start you guys off?”
I didn’t see a menu on the table, so I deferred to Noah. “Do you like clam strips? Best in the city,” he said.
“I’m allergic to shellfish.”
“Oh, sorry.” He puckered his lips, thinking. “Potato skins with the works?”
“Perfect.”
The waitress nodded, scribbling. “Coming up. Specials are on the board, and I’ll be back with your tea.”
“Do they have menus?” I asked after she’d gone.
Noah reached behind a basket boasting an array of
sauces and bottled spices, and removed a printed card. “It’s mostly a locals’ place. Once you’ve been here a few times, you get to know their food, but they keep these on hand for the new folk.”
“Like me.” My fingers brushed over the shade of the small lamp on our table. Chips of red, orange, and purple glass made nonsense patterns that cast sparkles of light across the marred tabletop. “How did you find this place?”
“I used to come here with an old girlfriend.”
My hand fisted. Jealousy slapped me in the face. Jealousy over a woman I didn’t know, and maybe he didn’t even like all that much. I was acting like an idiot. This was our first date. Why get upset over past girlfriends?
Because you don’t have anyone for him to get jealous over, and you hate that.
Maybe so.
“What did she like to order?” I asked.
His jaw muscle twitched. “House salad, no dressing.” Four simple words, said like a curse.
“What would she never order?”
He considered the question, starting to smile. “Double cheeseburger and seasoned fries, with a side of cole slaw.”
Sounded like heaven. “I’ll get that, then.”
“You don’t have—”
“The great thing about my powers is they keep my metabolism high,” I said. “I can eat pretty much anything I want.”
“Except shellfish.”
“Right.”
The waitress returned with my tea, and we both ordered
the double cheeseburgers. Instead of cole slaw, he asked for extra fries, and away she went again, still snapping her gum. Not something I usually saw in a restaurant, but Mallory’s seemed to run on its own rules.
“You looked out of breath when you got here,” Noah said. “Everything okay?”
“Yes and no, and I’m so sorry I’m late.” I squeezed a lemon slice into my tea.
“It’s okay, I only drank six cups of coffee waiting.”
My head jerked up. He was grinning. For the first time, I noticed he had tiny dimples in both cheeks. “Anything you can talk about?” he asked. “Something to do with Arnold Stark?”
“Very definitely about Arnold Stark.” I swirled my tea with the straw, unsure how much to tell Noah. We didn’t really have rules about discussing our cases, because we hadn’t had many. We also didn’t have many civilian friends.
“It’s okay if you can’t,” he said. “Talk about it, I mean.”
“I probably can, but it’s a long story. The long and short of it is that we know who we’re after now, both for the shooting and yesterday’s dead bodies. We just don’t know how to catch him. Or them or whatever.”
“Bodies? Plural?”
Oops. I told him about Stark, that he was found in his cell skinned, just like John Doe. I did, however, leave out the part about Officer Ortega. It seemed more along the lines of “need to know,” and Noah didn’t really need to know. Simon’s words about civilian panic were still too fresh in my mind. I also left out our morning visit to Weatherfield.
Noah followed along, nodding in all the right places. He didn’t press for details, respecting the boundaries without hesitation, which I appreciated.
“So how did you manage the afternoon off?” he asked.
“We’re waiting for new leads. I couldn’t do much sitting around the house or the hospital, so I thought lunch with our electrician would help pass the time nicely. It was either the pleasure of your company or helping Simon play catch-up all afternoon.”
“Simon?”
Double oops. “Um, Simon Hewitt, he’s an old friend of ours.”
“A Meta.”
“Yes, a Meta. He has abilities that might help us track down our killer. He and Tempest are working on it today. If we’re lucky, we’ll get a bead on this guy and get a serial killer off the street.”
“Serial killer?” Something in his tone rang of displeasure, annoyance.
“Three bodies and counting, Noah. It’s not a pretty term, but it seems accurate to me.”
“I didn’t mean to upset you, Dahlia.” He reached across the table and squeezed my hand. “I guess I don’t like the idea of you out there with people like that. I know it sounds like macho bullshit, or something.”
“Thank you, Noah, that’s sweet.” But if he wanted to be protective, he’d have to get in line.
We chatted nonsensically until the potato skins arrived, steamy and oozing with cheddar cheese and crispy bacon.
Little dishes of sour cream and guacamole were nestled on the plate in a bed of lettuce. Our waitress left a pair of small plates, and we dug in. I slathered my potato skin with sour cream until the orange cheese disappeared under a layer of white.
“So tell me something about you,” I said, blowing on my steaming appetizer. “You don’t talk too much about yourself, you know.”
“I find myself pretty boring,” he replied, applying equal amounts of guac and sour cream. “That’s why I keep asking you questions. What would you like to know?”
“Did you grow up here in Hollywood?” Even though we’d gone to the same high school, the cobbled-together school district still had three different elementary schools scattered around. Eventually, all three student bodies matriculated together at Parker High.
“Yep, my whole life. The shop’s been around for about four generations of Scotts, so we’ve been in the area in some form or another.” I bit into my potato skin. Hot grease dribbled down my chin. Noah reached out with a napkin and wiped it away. “My dad used to tell us stories about the Rangers, things he remembered from his childhood. Stories about . . . I guess they would have been your grandparents, and all the things they did.”
“Not my grandparents,” I said. “At least, not that I can figure. I don’t know a lot about my family history, so maybe there’s a Meta somewhere else down the bloodline. Teresa’s theory is that new Metas are waking up, ones without powers before. Kind of a cosmic balancing act, since so many died during the War.”
“You never knew you had powers before?” he asked, eyes widening a bit.
“Not until everyone got them back, no. I was a reporter, just trying to make my rent. Bonus points for me, though, because if I hadn’t had these powers, I probably would have burned down my apartment six months ago.” Even though my experience the night all Metas got their powers back was a little different from my friends’, the timing was the same.
“Thank God for small favors. What made you want to be a reporter?”
A short, uncomfortable laugh filled the long pause. “That’s a long story, actually. I wanted to do something to help people, but I wasn’t brave enough to even consider police work. Journalism seemed like the next best thing. Digging for the truth, keeping people informed. I was pretty good at it, too.”
“You’re wrong.”
I blinked. “What?”
He backpedaled quickly. “Not about being good at it, about being brave. Just seeing what you’ve gone through in the last twenty-four hours, you have more strength and courage than you give yourself credit for, Dahlia.”
Only sheer force of will prevented a puddle-of-goo moment. Heat flamed in my cheeks. The remnants of my potato skin held my complete attention. I watched a drop of yellow grease dribble down the side and plop onto the plate next to a bit of bacon.
“I didn’t mean to embarrass you.”
“It’s okay.” I looked up and returned his smile. “I just don’t get those kind of compliments very often.”
“I’ll have to make sure I compliment you as often as possible.”
“Don’t you dare.”
“Try and stop me.”
“Is that a challenge?”
“Most definitely.”
I held his gaze for several long minutes, engaging in an unofficial stare-off. He stuck out his tongue and waggled his eyebrows, trying to distract me with funny faces. I pursed my lips and held on, determined to win. Unfortunately, our lunch arrived and we looked up at the same time, ending the battle in a draw.
The affection I’d seen in his eyes dangled in my memory for a long while as we ate.
During the consumption
of two greasy cheeseburgers topped with lettuce, tomato, and pickles and heaps of spicy fries, we covered every first-date topic imaginable. Favorite color (mine, orange; his, green); why we both preferred spring over fall (birth versus death); the best place to watch the sun set in Los Angeles (the Santa Monica Pier, if you dared to brave the trip to that side of town); our mutual love of the hokey pokey and inline roller skates; and perhaps most important of all: regular or extra-crispy.
I didn’t press about his family. He mentioned his two brothers a few times, but avoided parents. Hints came out in memories and story snippets as we chatted, but not enough to draw a clear picture. Not enough to know how or when
they died. He reciprocated by not asking about my father—whom I had not once mentioned—and by keeping topics light. Enough darkness surrounded my life. I needed this break.
We also discovered a mutual fondness for white-water rafting.
“Three times,” he said, proud that he’d bested my two trips. “Twice in North Carolina and once in Colorado. The first time was a family trip. Mom, Dad, and my brothers, we all went up on vacation. I think I was eleven. We were all so scrawny back then, and pale. So damned pale. We burned in a reflection of the sun.”
I giggled at the image of him, a sunburned, gangly youth with flaming skin that matched his auburn hair; freckles darkened by sunlight, mischievous green eyes that never stopped watching.
“We only had money for rafting or tubing,” he continued. “Mom and Jimmy wanted tubing because it was safer and more relaxing. Dad and I wanted rafting, of course. Which meant Aaron was the deciding vote.”
“How’d you get him to pick rafting?”
“I bribed him with a candy bar I stole from a convenience store.”
My mouth fell open, and I started laughing. “So you’re a thief, are you? I may have to do my civic duty and place you under a citizen’s arrest.”
He quirked one eyebrow, tilting his head to the side. “Citizen’s arrest? And what does that entail, exactly? Home confinement?”
“That could be arranged,” I played along, still grinning. “I don’t know if home confinement is a stiff enough penalty for such a crime. I mean, candy bar theft is serious business, Noah.”
Pretending to think it over, he said, “What’s your suggestion?”
“Confinement to one room seems fair.”
Both eyebrows rose into twin arches, broadcasting amusement. “Any room?”
“I was thinking the smallest and least-used room in the house.”
“Ah, yes, the bedroom.”
My heart jumped. Okay, not quite what I was thinking.
He continued, “Tell me, Citizen’s Arresting Officer Perkins, does house arrest allow visitors?”
“Only if you found a willing visitor.” I stumbled a little with the banter. “Have someone in mind?”
Emerald eyes stared at me, seemed to look right past my joking exterior to the woman hiding inside, too nervous to come out and play. “There’s just one person I’d ask,” he said, so serious from just a moment ago.
Breath hitched in my throat. I barely managed, “Anyone I know?”
His lips parted.
“Dessert?” The tinny, gum-smacking voice of our waitress broke the spell. She stood at the head of the table, pen poised over pad.
“We were just discussing dessert,” Noah said, frown clearly telegraphing his annoyance. “I think we’ve decided to have something at my place.”
My heart pitter-pattered. His place. Dessert. House arrest.
Oh boy.
Had I sent out the wrong signals without realizing? I was interested, sure, but we’d known each other a day.
“Enjoy.” She slapped our bill facedown on the table and sauntered off. In most places, I would have called her rude. I watched her go, in her short denim skirt, white blouse, and green apron. Nah, just the right kind of attitude for a place like this.