Jon said, with a spurt of irritation, “You should know by now it doesn’t work that way with her.”
“Yeah,” Adam said. “I guess if it did, neither of us would be in this situation, would we?”
Jon sighed. His sister’s gift had never exactly made life easier for him. Why couldn’t she have been able to predict winning lottery numbers, or which girl in the bar was most likely to sleep with him, or something actually useful? Hearing the ways in which he might conceivably die was interesting, Jon supposed.
But he’d rather have gotten rich. Or laid.
Jon heard the scrape of Meena’s key in the lock. Jack Bauer heard it too, and quickly leapt off the couch to return to his dog bed.
Jon said, “We’ll talk about this later. I gotta go,” to Adam, then hung up and took his feet off the coffee table.
Meena came in looking flustered and fresh faced, as she always did when she returned from anywhere. She asked, “Was Jack Bauer on the couch just now?”
“Of course not,” Jon said, getting up. “How was your day, dear?”
“It sucked. I met a girl on the subway I think is going to end up sold into white slavery and then killed.”
“Sweet,” Jon said sarcastically.
“Tell me about it,” Meena said. “And Shoshona got the head writer gig. And the network is mandating a crappy vampire story line, so my beautiful and totally awe-inspiring proposal about the bad boy with the police chief dad was completely dead on arrival.”
“Shoshona got the head writer gig?” Jon asked. “That blows. You gave the subway girl your card, didn’t you?”
“Yeah,” Meena said, throwing her keys into the little tray on the kitchen counter, which she’d started keeping there for that purpose after Jon finally pointed out that her psychic power was useless at finding the things she kept losing. “Hopefully she’ll call.”
“What about Taylor?” Jon asked. He tried to keep his voice casual. He’d had a crush on Taylor Mackenzie—whom his sister had pointed out many times was way too young for him—since Meena had first started writing for the show.
“She’s the one getting the new vampire boyfriend,” Meena said. “They’ve got Gregory Bane’s best friend coming in to read with her on Friday. He’s hot, apparently. I think I saw him leaving the office with Shoshona tonight. But it was mostly only the back of his head.”
Jon glanced at his reflection in the round antique mirror Meena had hanging above the dining table.
“I’m hot,” he said, admiring his own reflection. “What do you think? Don’t I look like vampire material to you?”
Meena snorted. “Right. Playing a chorus member in the musical Mame when you were in high school doesn’t count as acting experience. Especially since you only did it for extra credit to keep from getting kicked off the baseball team thanks to your D in Spanish.”
She shrugged out of her jacket and crossed the room to meet Jack Bauer, who’d run over to give her a welcome lick.
“And how’s my little man?” she asked. “Did you save the world today? I think you did. I think you saved the world from nuclear annihilation, just like you do every single twenty-four hours. Look at you. Just look at you.”
Jack Bauer was a Pomeranian-chow mix Meena had insisted on bringing home from the ASPCA the first time they’d ever set foot in it, “just to look,” after David had walked out on her and she’d been pretty much comatose with depression. The tiny mutt had been sitting in a big empty cage by himself, his huge brown eyes so filled with anxiety that Meena had remarked that, with his blond fur, he resembled Kiefer Sutherland during a particularly dramatic moment on the television show 24.
When the dog had fallen into her arms as soon as the cage door was opened, showering her face with grateful kisses, the inevitable adoption was sealed, and the name Jack Bauer stuck, because the anxious look in the mutt’s eyes rarely vanished all the way, unless he was lounging in the apartment by Meena’s side.
“He saved the world, all right,” Jon said. “He tried to hump a maltipoo in the small dog run at Carl Schurz Park.”
“My hero,” Meena cried, scooping the dog up and hugging him. “Keep showing your male dominance, even though you’ve been fixed.” She turned to Jon. “So, what did you do today?”
“I was totally going to make chicken,” Jon said. “But when I got to the store none of the chickens looked any good.”
“Really?” Meena said, going over to the couch and reaching for the remote.
“Yeah,” Jon said. “They were all past their expiration dates. It was like the Perdue delivery didn’t come in on time or something.”
“Let’s just order in,” she said. She’d flipped on the news. “We haven’t had Thai in a while.”
He felt a surge of relief.
“Thai sounds great. Or Indian.”
“Indian sounds good, too,” she said. “Oh, my God, we got invited to the countess’s on Thursday. If we keep the lights out,” she added, like this was a perfectly reasonable way to deal with the problem, “we don’t have to worry about them seeing that we’re home under the crack in the door.”
“Meena.” Jon loved his sister.
But she was totally and completely insane.
And she always had been.
Meena shook her head. “Jon. You know I can’t help but love her. But she’s trying to fix me up with some Romanian prince her husband’s related to. Come on.”
“A prince?” Jon raised his eyebrows. “Seriously? Is he rich?”
“I don’t want to meet a prince,” Meena said. She sounded mad. She looked mad. “I’m already having the worst week of my life, and it’s only Tuesday!”
Jon knew Meena well enough to know this wasn’t about Shoshona getting the job, or the girl she’d met on the subway, or even the show, which she adored.
“What,” he said flatly. “What did you see?”
“Nothing,” she said, throwing him a confused look. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“You know something,” Jon said. “You know what I’m talking about. Who is it about? Me? It’s about me, isn’t it? Just tell me. I can take it. When am I going? Is it this week?”
Meena looked away. “What? No. You’re fine. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Jon shook his head. He didn’t think he was wrong. He’d lived with his kid sister long enough to recognize the signs.
She obviously knew something about somebody now … only who? And why wasn’t she saying?
“Is it Mom and Dad?” he asked. “I thought you said they were fine. I mean, relatively speaking.”
“They are fine.” Meena glared at him. “For two people who continue to whoop it up at happy hour every night down in Boca like they think they’re F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald.”
“Then I don’t get it,” Jon said. “Your crazy-ass millionaire neighbor who thinks she’s a countess invited you to a dinner party at her place to meet a real Romanian prince on Thursday night. And you’re telling me you don’t think you’re going to get any story ideas out of that? Are you serious?”
Meena looked at him, her big dark eyes luminous