“I’m afraid this meal isn’t going to be up to our usual standards, at least for when we have a special guest,” said Hugh. He was standing over the stove, stirring a bubbling red sauce. “But it’s been along day for us both, and we weren’t expecting to come home to company.” He looked sideways at Nova, his eyes twinkling almost mischievously.
“I wasn’t expecting to be served a homemade meal at all,” Nova said, her attention skipping from the tomato sauce to the colander of steaming spaghetti noodles in the sink to a skillet full of cooked ground beef.
“I hope you like Italian,” said Hugh. “You’re not vegetarian, are you?”
She shook her head and watched as he scraped the meat into the sauce.
“I love Italian food,” she said, trying to match their unprecedented normalcy. “My dad was Italian, and my mom used to cook pasta for us all the time because he liked it so much. It was never her specialty, though. Not as good as her lumpia.”
“Oh, I love lumpia,” said Hugh, more enthusiastically than the comment warranted.
Nova bit the inside of her cheek, almost willing him to read her thoughts.My dad, my mom—who aren’t here anymore. Who believed so strongly that you would come, that you would protect them. Who taughtmeto believe you would protect us.
But Hugh just went on stirring the pot, his expression serene.
“Where did McLain come from?” said Simon, startling her. “If your dad was Italian.”
Her heart hammered. She’d forgotten. She was not Nova Artino, not here. She was Nova Jean McLain. “Uh… my… grandfather,” she stammered. “Paternal grandfather. He was Scottish, but… lived in Italy. For a while.”
Simon made a noise of mild interest. A polite noise. A noise for trivial small talk.
Had she fooled them? Or were they trying to lure her off her guard?
Despite how cheerful they were both acting, she could see that Hugh had bruise-tinged shadows beneath his eyes and the start of stubble on his usually clean-shaven jaw. Simon, too, seemed less spirited than usual.
“Are you both okay?” she said.
Simon chuckled and he and Hugh shared a commiserating look. “Adrian told us you slept for a long time last night,” he said, sweeping the carrot tops into his palm and dumping them into the sink on the other side of the bar. “I suppose he didn’t tell you the news?”
“News?”
The door behind her swung open and Adrian emerged, holding a can of diced tomatoes like a trophy. “Mission accomplished.”
“Thanks, Adrian,” said Hugh, taking the can from Adrian. Instead of using a can opener, he dug his fingernails into the edge of the can and peeled back the aluminum top. He dumped the contents into the sauce. “Simon was just telling Nova about the Sentinel.”
She and Adrian both stilled.
“The Sentinel?” she asked.
“Yep,” Simon said darkly. “He’s alive.”
Adrian scowled. It surprised Nova. For all the times he’d heardhercomplain about the Sentinel, he’d never said anything negative about the vigilante himself. At least, not that she could recall. She’d had a sneaking suspicion that he sort of admired the guy.
“Right,” said Adrian. “I guess I should have mentioned something. It’s all over the news right now.”
Nova blinked at him. His tone was odd—evasive.
Simon slid off his stool and came around the bar, passing in frontof Nova. She caught sight of the knife in his hand and every muscle tightened. She clawed her fingers, targeting the exact patch of skin she would use to knock him unconscious.
He grabbed a towel from the counter and started to wipe off the blade.
“Excuse me,” he said, turning back to her.
Nova started in surprise. “Right, sorry,” she said, easing away from him.
He dropped the knife into the block with the others.
She tried to disentangle the knot in her stomach, irritated with her own overreaction. “So… how do we know he’s alive?”