"Ma'am," he said, "John sent me for your luggage." "It's all right there, Cody. Thanks." "Oh, no problem, ma'am. I'll have it UPS'd tomorrow." He grabbed the bags and headed for the door. Cade let him out and came back to lean against the desk. When he didn't ask, Mandi said, "UPS is easier. Safer for the stuff in them, too." Nodding, Cade said, "Figured that." She parted a finger from her cup to indicate Cade's cup and asked, "You don't like champagne?" "Nah. I'm more of a beer person. Or Dr Pepper. Or gin and bitter lemon." Andrea's snort almost startled him. When he looked at her, she said, "I just don't believe this, that's all. Gin and bitter lemon? Me, too. I didn't think anyone else drank those." "Hm," said Cade. "Horses, cats, gin and bitter lemon, and gorgeous eyes. That's a damned good score so far. Will you be very surprised if I propose to you later, ma'am?" "No, probably not. Will you be very surprised if I accept?" Cocking his head, Cade said, "Oh, yeah. I'm pretty sure I would be. You can't look that delicious and not be married if married is what you want to be." "Maybe I'm just waiting for Mr. Right." Shaking his head, Cade said, "Nope. Doesn't seem to fit. Can't say exactly why, but I don't think that's the answer." Mandi laughed and asked, "Did I tell you he seems to be fairly smart, too?" "Yes, indeed you did. Notice how he mixed that compliment with undeniable logic before he stated an intuition?" Standing up, Mandi said, "Sure did. If nobody's going to drink any more champagne, I think it's dinnertime." Andrea and Cade agreed and they trooped out of the room and down the hall to the elevator, which was moving with a bit more alacrity since the convention crowd had begun thinning. Cade had expected Andrea to produce a car and simply drive them to the restaurant she'd mentioned, so it surprised him a bit when Mandi poked the button for the top floor. During the ride up, he considered a few things. Mandi had likely spent some time discussing him with Andrea. Call it a briefing of sorts. She'd known about his cats and his preference for gin and bitter lemon was in his records. Horses were another matter; he couldn't remember having mentioned his childhood horse to Mandi, but John knew about Cloud and knew Cade had owned part of a riding stable in Germany back in the seventies; after all, the agency had used the place as a meeting point dozens of times. Andrea was nearly six feet tall and had striking eyes. John might also have mentioned Giselle, who'd had similar features and a place in Cade's heart, and how Cade had considered leaving the agency when she'd been killed during an arrest that the system had refused to prosecute for diplomatic reasons. Or maybe he was just being a bit paranoid. Could be she truly just happened to be a tall goddess with ice-gray eyes who liked cats, horses, and the same booze as Cade. He wondered what the other convertee in Atlanta looked like and whether Andrea had 'volunteered' or been 'chosen' to coach him. On the other hand, the conversion was underway, like it or not, and he'd been issued a goddess. Cade glanced at Andrea and decided that things could most definitely be worse. From the top floor they took the stairs to the roof and Mandi retrieved her flattened can from its hideaway under the eaves. After she put it in place to keep the door from locking, she turned to Andrea and Cade and put her hands on her hips. In a dead serious tone, Mandi said, "I'm afraid it's time to choose, Ed." A trick? A trap? For what reason? No point in trying to escape, in any case. "Could you be just a bit more specific?" he asked. Noddingly indicating Andrea, Mandi said, "You have to choose which of us will carry you." Hm. He hadn't known that Andrea could fly. Cool. Maybe that meant that flight was one of the powers he'd have later. "You mean you aren't going to fight over me?" Andrea snorted and groaned softly, "Oh, yeah, right." Cade glanced at her and said, "Hey, it was just a thought." Shrugging, he told Mandi, "Whoever wants to haul me may do so. I know better than to choose between goddesses. Need a coin to toss?" "Oh, never mind," said Mandi, and she wrapped her arms around Cade and lifted them into the evening sky. After two minutes of flying eastward they landed among some trees near a very new-looking restaurant. It was a bit crowded, as is normal for new places, but Andrea opined that the crowd would act in their favor because nobody'd notice the number of times Cade visited the serving lines. Almost two hours later Cade felt pretty much full for the first time in two days. Andrea had been right, for the most part. Only one of the waitresses had noticed that Cade seemed to be packing away inordinate amounts of food, and while she watched with a certain amount of amazement, she apparently said nothing about it. On the way back to the hotel, Andrea suddenly dropped away from them like a stone falling toward the ground and Cade almost lost the dinner he'd spent all that time consuming when Mandi followed her in the same manner. Looking down, he saw where Andrea was going. A tanker truck had maneuvered to refill a local gas station's underground tanks and a yellow pickup truck in the alley behind the station was heading straight for the truck at about fifty miles per hour. As they neared the ground, they could see the driver slumped on the steering wheel. As Andrea flew to deal with the pickup, Mandi landed to set Cade down and flew to join Andrea. Everything seemed well in hand, but an unanticipated wild card in the form of a blue Ford sedan entered the parking lot behind the tanker truck. The driver couldn't take his eyes off the two flying women and didn't have sense enough to stop the car. The Ford hit a light pole and one of the wires above snapped with a sound like a rifle shot, then swung down and touched the concrete, where the current made it dance crazily around the car. When Cade saw the woman on the passenger side open her door, he ran toward the car yelling for her to stay inside it. She stared at him dazedly for a moment, noticed that the man beside her was bleeding, unconscious, and slumped between the steering wheel and the driver's door, and freaked out. The power line was slapping itself frantically around the car as the woman screamed, opened the door wider, and got out of the car, but she couldn't run. Her gashed and bloody left leg gave out and she tried to crawl, but chances were just too good that the power line would hit her. Cade saw a stave from a broken pallet and grabbed it on the way to the car. It was one of the spine boards; hard wood with half a dozen slats still stuck to it. He almost dove over the front of the car and managed to bat the power line aside from the woman twice as she continued crawling, unaware that he was there. Then the power line slapped the side of the car and rebounded so quickly that Cade had no chance to swing at it. He could only brace the stave crossways in front of the oncoming power line and hope things would go well. The heavy line smashed through the wooden stave and hit Cade's chest like a baseball bat, knocking him flat and slapping him twice more across the chest and legs. With each smashing slap, the line sent massive amounts of electricity through Cade to the ground. He was barely conscious enough to see Mandi grab the cable and wrestle with it to prevent it from slamming him again, then he passed out. Someone was patting his face and calling his name. He opened his eyes to see Mandi kneeling beside him. Behind her he saw the power line knotted around around the broken pole. "Hi," he said. "Thanks. It was gonna get me again." "Everything's okay now. How do you feel?" Cade gave that some thought, then flatly said, "Ow." Chuckling, Mandi asked, "Can you move?" "Damned if I know. Gimme a minute and I'll find out." Although his arms and legs were still jangling from the electricity, they shakily lifted and moved a bit on command. "Guess so," he said, trying to sit up. That didn't work the first time, but he was able to roll over and lever himself swayingly upright in front of her. "I've been better, but I think I'll survive." "Great," said Mandi, "We need to get moving," and without ceremony she picked him up and launched into the sky some distance before he heard Andrea ask, "How is he?" "Just barely alive, ma'am," said Cade. "Nice of you to ask, though." Mandi snorted a short laugh as Andrea came into view and peered down at Cade. "Did anybody get a good look at us?" she asked Mandi. "I don't think so," said Mandi. "The pickup driver was dead, the car driver was unconscious, and the girl was halfway across the parking lot by the time I secured the power lines. Nobody came near the car before I lifted with Cade." "Sneaky angels," said C
ade. "I don't know why, exactly, but I like that concept." "You said you were a pagan," said Andrea. "Do pagans believe in angels?" "Angels. Goddesses. Same things, different labels." When Mandi set him down on the roof, she didn't let