“What is she playing at?” Jay snapped. “I’m not built for this.”
“I so want to say something,” Jay growled, bandana tails like triple pennants as he sprung the full width of Miss K Avenue. “I wish I could pull the apple from the waist down trick.”
In fact, Jo had to blink twice to see if the figure had not reached the corner on his present side. Then blink again at the unmistakable sight of Suzé; statue-still, and not far from a twin-pillared road sign.
“Who else would it be?” Suzé yawned, and not even with a hint of laboured breath.
“He thought you were some chap who turned off into one of the streets earlier,” said Jay, reaching the pavement and placing hands on knees. “Although before he explains that, I want to know why you had us running like we were practicing the ten-second dash.”
“I am not built for this time of night,” said Jay. “Nor charging up here because you want us to move faster.”
“Hang on a minute,” said Jo. “Why did you stop?”
“And throw it all away at the last moment? That’s very becoming of you, Sonnet.”
“Probably tired in the head from thinking up ways to get inside of ours and making this a night I want to end,” Jay groaned, walking over to a gatepost; slamming both hands against it; then pulling them back as if they had touched an oven.
“Would you be as welcoming if someone came up to you and went for it with both fists?” Suzé asked.
“Why don’t you touch and find out,” Suzé said, stepping away from the gate that led to a path of trees and matching undergrowth. He hadn’t realised it before, but the post next to him may as well have been a giant. Even the neck part was above his head and made the waist-high ones near Orion, Nimbus and Elizabeth Y. Avenues look like children.
“He struck it,” said Suzé, “You are gently placing a hand on an emblem.”
“It won’t bite,” said Suzé.
“Has it taken a finger?”
“I don’t like this.”
“It’s as if something that shouldn’t be there, has woken up.”
“…Within…” Jo gasped, pointing at his chest with his free hand. “I don’t… like it.”
Suzé was going to have a comeback for that, Jo braced. Either regarding her being the night-time nursery leader or letting it flow past her like a missed shower of water. Only the reply didn’t come. Blinking, he turned to Suzé to be met by a full burst of sunlight and overhead birdsong; plus the solar warmth associated with removing a jacket.
Bird chime - no - bell chime. Clear as if the hand of a clock within had just reached the hour. Abrupt as if a stream had just been released from the confines of a dam. Coursing from within, along his arm, through his hand, and into the –
“What in all the Patchwork-” he gasped, pulling his hand away from the post but still seeing the unmistakable lines of light. “It’s still on me.”
“Seven,” he exhaled, knowing the equally radiant numeral with the Grand V followed by two vertical strokes without having to look twice. Plus the word below decorated with a shade of glacial blue, yet for a second had a tint of rose. “Song.”
“Song and Sonnet,” said Suzé.
“Need I repeat the verse spoken on the day of your investiture?”
“The Arms of Time a Pair of
the Sixfold shall wield:
One of the Moon;
The Other of the Sun.”
“Sounds Lion and Unicornish to me,” said Jay.
Jo stared at the Crescent. Lynnette Louisa Jones, or “Lynette” or short. The First ‘Song’ and the reason his full code name was Jones. Although Patchwork knew what she and the First Sonnet - Kiera Adelicia James - would have made of their latest inheritors.
“I’m more of a tiger fan myself,” said Jay. “The white ones with the chocolate stripes. Or even the kind that are supposed to be blue.”
“But now if any of the other Houses ‘happen’ to come this way; they will find that the Lion and Unicorn - or Song and Sonnet - are reclaiming their lost territories,” Suzé continued.
“Feel like I’m some sort of tomcat or bear,” said Jay.
“As long as it’s not a tarantula. I couldn’t handle it at the moment.”
“I wanted a gharial but it couldn’t stay in the house.”
“I could say the same what Mirri-what’s-it- hang on,” Jay said, looking around. “Where’s Suzé?”
“You’re telling me that’s it?” said Jo, pointing at the still glowing posts. “They don’t - go off?”
“An hour?” said Jay, rubbing an arm. “People will be taking nocturnal self-fishes.”
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