“Belt?”
Liv pulled out her little red notebook. “The one Lena’s wearing. The disgusting belt with the scorpion trapped inside.”
Macon held out his hand. Lena unclicked the buckle and handed the belt to him.
Link turned on John. “What did you do to her?”
“Nothing. Ridley’s been ordering me around since she let me out of the Arclight.”
“Why would you agree?” Even Macon was incredulous. “You don’t strike me as particularly selfless.”
“I didn’t have a choice. I’ve been stuck in this house for months now, trying to get out.” John slumped against the wall. “Ridley wouldn’t help me unless I found a way for her to Cast. So I did.”
“You expect us to believe that a powerful hybrid Incubus allowed a Mortal girl to trap him in her bedroom?”
John shook his head, frustrated. “This is Ridley we’re talking about. I think you all have a bad habit of underestimating her. When she wants something, she finds a way to get it.” We all knew he was right.
“He’s telling the truth, Uncle Macon,” Reece said, from where she was standing by the fireplace.
“You’re absolutely sure?”
Reece wasn’t about to bite Macon’s head off, the way she had done to me. “I’m sure.”
John looked relieved.
Liv stepped forward, her notebook in hand. She had no interest in why Ridley may or may not have done something. She wanted the facts. “You know, we’ve been looking for you,” she told John.
“Yeah? Bet you’re not the only ones.”
Liv and Macon convinced John to sit down at the table with the rest of us, which meant Link refused to. He leaned against the wall next to the fireplace, sulking. All the Linkubus hype aside, John had changed Link in ways I would never really understand. And I knew something else John didn’t know.
As much as Link loved driving all the girls crazy, it didn’t really matter. There was only one girl Link wanted, and none of us knew where to find her.
“Abraham has gone to great lengths to locate your whereabouts, literally tearing this town apart. What I need to know is why. Abraham doesn’t do anything without a reason.” Macon was asking the questions, while Liv wrote down John’s responses. Reece was sitting across from John, watching for any trace of a lie.
John shrugged. “I’m not really sure. He found me when I was a kid, but he’s not exactly a father figure, if you know what I mean.”
Macon nodded. “You said he found you. What happened to your parents?”
John shifted uncomfortably in his seat. “I don’t know. They disappeared. I’m pretty sure they ditched me because I was… you know, different.”
Liv stopped writing. “All Casters are different.”
John laughed. “I’m not a regular Caster. My powers didn’t manifest when I was a teenager.” Liv stared at him. He pointed at her notebook. “You’re going to want to write this part down.”
She raised an eyebrow. Subject displays combative attitude. I could imagine it on the page.
“I was born this way, and my powers have only gotten stronger. Do you know what it’s like to be able to do things no one else your age can?”
“Yes.” There was a trace of something in Liv’s voice, a mix of sadness and sympathy. She had always been smarter than everyone around her, designing devices to measure the pull of the moon, or some other thing no one else cared about or understood.
Macon was studying John, and you could see the former Incubus in him sizing up this strange new one. “And exactly what sort of powers do you have, aside from being impervious to the effects of sunlight?”
“Standard Incubus stuff—amplified strength, hearing, sense of smell. I can Travel. And girls are pretty into me.” John stopped and looked at Lena as if they shared a secret. She looked away.
“Not as much as you think,” I said. He smiled at me, enjoying Macon’s protective custody.
“I can do other things, too.”