Font Size:

Garkin doesn’t answer right away.

I look at him.

“Well?”

“She’s got one. Four or five, from what I heard. Name’s Ben. Smart. Bit of a firecracker. No file on the dad.”

My pulse kicks.

“No file?” I echo.

“No record. No claim. School forms list her as sole guardian. No birth cert with a male named. She’s keeping it tight.”

I lean back. My tail curls instinctively along the barstool footrest. My mind’s already racing.

If she had a kid—ourkid—would she really keep him from me? For this long?

Then again… I left her in a wreckage of chaos. Not by choice, but still. Five years is a long time to survive alone.

“She ever ask around about me?” I ask, voice quieter.

Garkin hesitates. “I think she assumed you were gone for good. Buried. Or… worse.”

She thought I wasdead.

I nod once. Let that settle. Then exhale through my nose.

“I’m not walking into her door like a thunderstrike,” I say.

Garkin raises an eyebrow. “You’re not?”

“No. She’s got a life now. Aroutine.You said the kid’s in school?”

“Kindergarten. Local academy.”

I run my tongue over the edge of a fang.

“She ever mention anything to anyone about trouble finding decent teachers?”

He squints at me. “How would I know?”

“She tell anyone the class needs structure? Stability?”

“Oh,that. Yeah. She gripes about it at the corner cafe. Some day-shift worker overheard. Said she was on her fourth sub this month. Last one quit mid-day.”

I smile. A slow, wicked,completely logicalsmile.

Garkin sees it.

“Oh no.”

“Yes.”

“No. Boss. No. You’renot?—”

“I am.”

“You’re going to fake credentials and insert yourself as a substitute kindergarten teacher?”