She looked horrified. “I’m calling the police.” She turned and raced down the stairs.
Matt met my eyes, waiting to see what I was going to do. I rushed from the room and to the kitchen, where I knew Mom would be on the phone.
“Mom, please!” I reached for the phone, wrestling it from her hands.
“911. What is your emergency?” I heard the operator’s voice on the other line.
“Sorry, hit the wrong button,” I said and quickly ended the call.
“Who are you people?” Mom’s face was red with anger and hurt. “How dare you come in here and talk about Jodi?”
“Mom.” My voice shook as I fought the urge to cry. “Please, listen to me. Do you remember what happened the night I left?”
“Get out. I don’t know who you are, but I want you gone. Now!” She pointed to the door as if I didn’t already know where it was.
“Please, hear me out, and then if you still want me to leave I will. We both will.”
“Please, Ms. Marshall.” Matt motioned to the kitchen table. “Sit down and talk to us. Five minutes. That’s all we’re asking for.”
Even though Matt was talking, Mom kept her eyes on me.
“I can make us some tea. You always drink tea when you get home from work.”
She tilted her head to the side and stared into my eyes like she was trying to see my soul.
“I know I don’t look like myself, Mom, but you’d know me anywhere. You have to. You’re my mom.”
“What happened to you?” She said the words slowly, like they were hard to get out.
“Everything I told you about Alex and me being different was true.” I walked around her, placing her cell on the counter and going for the teapot on the stove. I filled it with water and placed it on the burner, turning it on high.
Matt walked Mom to the table and sat down. She waited for me to sit and then finally gave in.
“Alex? That boy who came here after you cut yourself?”
“Yes. He’s like me. We’re different. Not entirely human. Well, I am human now, but that’s a long story.”
She shook her head. All this information must have been giving her one hell of a headache.
“Okay, how do I start?” Poisoned blood, zombie deer, evil Ophi trying to kill me, Hades taking me to the underworld? Leading with any of those would’ve sent her over the edge. “Dad,” I blurted out. “I met Dad.”
“Melodie told me that. She said she saw you. You stole her car and left her at the park.” She shook her head, obviously not believing that either.
I still felt awful about what I’d done to Mel. “Yes, I did.” I lowered my head. “But, I had to. Mom…” I reached for her hands, but she pulled back. She still wasn’t convinced I was her daughter. I put my hands in my lap. “My blood is different than yours, and it’s because of Dad. He didn’t walk out on you like you thought he did. He had to leave to protect both of us. He’s not human.”
Mom made a sound like a gurgled laugh. “That I could almost believe.”
“He died about a month after I was born.”
Her eyes shot up to meet mine. “You said you met him.”
“I did. Alex took me to a place. It operates as a school for people like me. They—we—call ourselves Ophi. We’re all born under the thirteenth sign of the zodiac, Ophiuchus. We’re necromancers. I met Dad because we raised his soul.” I left off the part about Victoria raising Dad to torture me.
“Okay, that’s enough. I’ve listened. I don’t believe you. This is some school prank, and I don’t want to be part of it.” She stood up and shook her head. “You know, for a moment, I thought maybe you two knew something about Jodi—what happened to her. But you’re just messing with me, and that’s really cruel.”
“Mom, we’re not. Please. I’m telling you the truth. I’m Jodi. This is Matt. You remember Matt. I had to raise our souls, so we’re in different bodies, but we’re still us.” She stared at me with a look of horror, but not because she believed me. Because she couldn’t believe I’d create such a crazy story. “I died, Mom. I killed myself. The human part of me, at least. Matt died, too. You know that. You were here. Only you didn’t know it was because of me. My blood killed him. Just like it killed you.”
She shook her head. “I’m not dead.”
“Not anymore. Alex brought you back. It’s part of what we can do. Alex saved your life, and then I left before I could hurt you again.”
The teapot whistled on the stove, piercing the air like an alarm.
“I’ll get it.” Matt got up and walked to the stove while Mom and I continued to stare at each other.
“Please. If you love me, you should be able to see it’s me. Even in this body. Look at me. Really look.”
She walked around the table and stood in front of me. Normally we were the same height, but Liz’s small frame was inches shorter than Mom.
“I haven’t looked down at you in years.”
“Get past the outside. That’s not me. I’m in here.” I put my hand to my heart. “Mom.” My eyes watered, blurring my vision.
She moved closer, looking deep in my eyes. “Jodi?”
“Yes, it’s me.”
Her arms were around me a second later. I wasn’t sure if she truly believed it was me or if she was just desperate to believe it was true. Either way, it felt amazing to be in her arms.
Matt walked past us, smiling at me. He placed three cups of tea on the table and sat down, waiting for us.
I tried to pull away, but Mom kept her grasp on my arms. “It’s really you.” It wasn’t a question this time.
Matt motioned to Mom’s chair. “This is a lot to take in. Maybe you should sit down and have some tea, Ms. Marshall.”
I walked Mom back to her seat. She didn’t take her eyes off me. “Tell me more, but go slowly.”
I nodded and took a deep breath. Where had I left off? “Like I said, Alex took me to meet other people like me. That’s where I met Dad. He’s buried in the cemetery at the school.”
“Is he—was he like you?”
“Yes. He was an Ophi, too. That’s why he had to leave. We don’t come into our powers until we’re around sixteen or seventeen. It’s different for some people. But once our powers come out, we’re dangerous to humans…and animals.” I remembered the deer. I could start there.
“The rabid deer,” Mom said, beating me to it. “That was the one you hit with your car, wasn’t it?”
“Yes. I bled on it, and it came back to life. Only I didn’t know how to use my powers yet at that point, and what I raised was a mindless zombie deer.”
“The nurse at school?”
I nodded. “I killed her with my tears when she checked me out after the car accident.” I didn’t want to run through the entire list, so I jumped ahead to the most important one. “You died when you touched the cut on my hand. You wanted to prove your blood was the same as mine, but it wasn’t anymore. Alex saved you.”
“And then you were gone.” She sipped her tea, obviously needing time to process all this.
I drank my tea in two big gulps.
“You still haven’t learned to enjoy your tea, have you?” Mom’s mouth curved into a small smile. She’d always told me I drank tea all wrong.
“It tastes better hot,” we said at the same time.
A tear fell from her eyes. If she hadn’t been convinced I was her daughter before, she was now.
“Why didn’t you tell me sooner? I thought you ran off with that boy. I thought you were so distraught over Matt’s death that you couldn’t deal with things around here anymore.”
All of that was true. “I couldn’t tell you sooner because I didn’t have a handle on my powers yet. The only reason I’m here now is because I’m human. Alex and the others are trapped in the underworld with Hades.”
Mom opened her mouth to talk, but I held up one finger to stop her.
“Yes, that Hades. He doesn’t like the Ophi because we take his souls from the afterlife. He wanted to take all our souls and end the Ophi line with me. My body is still there.”
“In Hell?”
“The underworld is actually broken up into three different places. Tartarus, which is Hell. The Elysian Fields, which is Heaven. And the Fields of Asphodel, which is where most people end up and roam around, not happy or sad.”
“Where is your body?” Of course she’d ask that.
“It goes back and forth between working for Hades at the palace, escorting souls to their afterlives, and…”
“Oh, God.” Mom raised her hand to her mouth.
“I’m okay, Mom. I raised my human soul. Well, really it was the human part of my soul. I can tune out the underworld and what’s going on there.”
“You aren’t dangerous to me now? Does that mean you can stay?”
I wanted to. “No. I have to save the others like me, and I can’t leave my Ophi half down there, either. It’s being tortured. Sooner or later, the pain will be too much for me to tune out anymore.” I wasn’t sure if that was entirely true, but I was willing to bet Hades would make it true once he found out what I’d done.
“How are you going to save yourself and the others?”
“I have to go back to the school. Medusa’s spirit is there. She’s sort of my ancestor.”
“Your what?” Mom’s eyes practically bugged out of her head.
“I know. Crazy, right? But she’s really nice. All those myths about her being mean, they aren’t true. She was cursed. Before that, she was beautiful. And she cares about the Ophi. We’re all her children in a way, because her blood is what gave us our powers.”
Mom didn’t look like she was breathing. “So, she’s wandering around at that school?”
“No. Her spirit is trapped in a statue there, but I can connect to the statue and communicate with her. At least, I could when I had my Ophi powers. I’m not sure what it will do to me now.”
Mom reached across the table. “Don’t do anything that might hurt you. I lost you once. I can’t do it again.”
“Neither can I.” Matt reached for my other hand. Neither of them was going to make this easy on me.
“I’m going to talk to some Ophi who are still here first and make sure I’ll be okay.” If Mason even knew what the statue would do to a human.
Mom squeezed my hand. “How long can you stay?”
“Matt wants to see his family, make sure they’re okay.”
Matt let go of my hand and finished his tea. “We should go soon.”
“You aren’t going to explain all this to them, are you?” Mom looked at Matt this time.
He shrugged. “Maybe. I mean, you believed Jodi. Why wouldn’t my parents believe me?”
Mom sighed. “Your parents buried you, Matt. I’m not sure they’d be able to handle this.”
“And I’m not sure I want that many people knowing the truth about me. It’s too risky.” I hated doing this to him. I mean, I’d told my mom everything, but I was telling him he couldn’t be honest with his parents.
Mom finally let go of me. “You could stay here if you want.”
“What?” Matt and I asked in unison.
“This place is too big for one person, and I’m guessing Jodi won’t be staying here long. You’re going back to your Ophi people as soon as you figure out how to save them, right?” She was doing her best to understand, and I loved her for it.
I nodded, looking down at my empty cup. It hurt too much to look at either of them, knowing I was hurting them both.
“All right, then. Having Matt around will remind me of you. It would make things a little easier, so really it would be helping both of us.”
Matt looked at me, trying to see what I thought of the idea.
I shrugged. “I think you should do it. You could stay in town and keep an eye on your family.”
“I could tell everyone that you’re my nephew,” Mom said. “We could even invite your parents over for dinner every now and then so you could spend time with them.”
Matt had always been sensitive in a tough guy way. I’d never seen him tear up. Not once, but his tough exterior couldn’t handle this. “I don’t know what to say.”
“Say you’ll stay.” I reached over, placing my hand on top of his. “I’d feel better knowing Mom’s not alone, that you’re not alone. I love you both.” I did. On some level, I loved Matt.
He squeezed my hand. “Okay. I’ll stay.”
I knew he’d been waiting for me to say I loved him, and this wasn’t exactly what he’d had in mind, but he was going to take it anyway.
Matt couldn’t take his own life back, so I was giving him mine.