"We shouldn't be doing this," Fortune said from the back seat.
Jonathan found the button.
All four doors unlocked simultaneously. The sound was like a prison door slamming closed. Jonathan grinned and got out of the car. The others followed him. Lohengrin was humming something martial as they went up the sculpted concrete path to the door. Fortune started behind them both, but hurried to catch up, as if he wanted to protect the house from them.
"This is just . . . okay, be careful in here, okay? This is my mom's house. I don't want you to—"
"John," Jonathan said. "We aren't high school kids sneaking into the liquor cabinet and downloading porn. We're grown men searching for a particular answer to a specific question."
Fortune hesitated.
"We will do you no dishonor," Lohengrin intoned. "I swear it."
That was apparently the trick, because Fortune took a key out of his pocket, unlocked the door, and stepped in. While he disarmed the alarm system, Jonathan took in the house. A black stone fountain burbled to itself in the entryway. The décor in the main rooms was chic and clean, with high ceilings and open spaces. He could almost see Peregrine rising from the couch and stretching out her wings. A glass wall led out to the deck he'd seen before, through other eyes.
"Come on," Fortune said, heading down a hallway to their left. "Let's get this over with."
Jonathan walked after him. The art that hung tastefully from the wall was beautiful, one piece commenting subtly on the next. The air smelled like his grandmother's house in Virginia, the air conditioning doing something arcane that reminded him of cucumbers. The architecture itself made him think of television sets—everything a little too spacious and a little too clean, and everything, everything, in place. Jonathan tried to imagine what it would have been like growing up in a world like this, a climate-controlled childhood. And nothing anywhere that referenced Peregrine's past as sex symbol and lover of the half-Black, half-Asian pimp-turned-ace-turned-monk-turned-martyr Fortunato.
Lohengrin paused in the entryway, swaying slightly. His brow was furrowed in intense concentration.
"What's up, big guy?" Jonathan asked.
"John's powers. His old powers," Lohengrin said. "He almost destroys the world, ja?"
"Yeah," Jonathan agreed. "Time magazine did a whole thing on it. Bunch of people thought he was the messiah or the antichrist, or whatever. If Fortunato hadn't come in, it would have been ugly."
"Ja," the German agreed. "And we are helping to get his powers back?" Jonathan blinked. "But," he said. "That stuff. Back at the bar. His destiny . . ."
Lohengrin nodded in agreement but still frowning. "I may have been wrong," he said.
"Huh," Jonathan said. And then, "Hey, Fortune?"
Peregrine's bedroom. Extra-wide king-size-plus bed with raw silk sheets, a skylight on runners that could open to let someone in or out if they could fly, tasteful bedside table and lamp with the latest issue of Variety open to an article about American Hero. But no John Fortune.
"Fortune?"
"In here. Dressing room."
It was like a walk-in closet the size of an apartment. Dresses, coats, shoes, suits, sweats, a dresser devoted to undergarments. And a table with a jewelry case that would shame some department stores, complete with vanity mirror where John Fortune was sitting, hands flat on the table, jaw set, eyes focused and determined. He looked like the world's most desperate drag queen getting ready to suit up.
A steel safe door two feet square gazed out from the wall at shoulder height like high-security Dadaist art.
"Fortune?" Jonathan said. "Hey, the Lone Grin here had a point that might be worth just kicking—"
"All her jewelry is in there," he said, nodding at the safe. "Necklaces, amulets, beads. Whatever."
"Yeah, but . . . you see, we were wondering if maybe getting back your powers . . . I mean the last time you had 'em—"
"I know what happened. I was there."
"All we meant was, the stakes are a little—"
"You just thought of that now?"
Lohengrin raised a hand like a kid in school. "It was me," he said.
"Yeah," Jonathan said. "I didn't really think of it."
"Well, I did," Fortune said. "It's okay. I'm good with it."
"That's great," Jonathan said, "but I'm not sure—"
"Step off, okay!" Fortune shouted. "You are the one who wanted to try this, right? I didn't ask you to poke into my life. You took that on yourself. You're the one who came up with the bright idea of hauling me up here and digging up this amulet. I'm just Captain Cruller, the guy who used to be famous for letting his own father fucking die! You hold up a chance for me to get that back, and then you want to talk about it? If you ladies are getting cold feet, go stick 'em in something hot!"
Fortune's face flushed red, and his breath sounded like a bull's.
"You are right," Lohengrin said. "I gave my word to help in this. I will not fail you."
"Um, hello?" Jonathan said. "What about maybe destroying the world?"
"I have given my word," Lohengrin repeated. "Honor demands I do this."
"Honor demands what? How fucking drunk are you?"
But Lohengrin had already put out his hand. The blade that appeared in it glowed with a soft, pure light. The German turned to the safe and with a flick of his wrist carved a hole in the steel door and part of the surrounding wall. John Fortune yelped and sprang forward.
"What the fuck!" he shouted.
"I opened the safe," Lohengrin said, as if that wasn't obvious. "Is what we came for, nein?"
"You broke the safe," Fortune yelled. "You didn't tell me you were going to break it."
"But . . ." Lohengrin began. Fortune turned his back to them both, reaching into the darkness of the safe. The rant was going on under his breath. Jonathan caught the words "very clever" and "dickhead."
He was starting to think John Fortune might not be a sentimental drunk.
Lohengrin started to pace, his wide, teutonic brow furrowed. Jonathan tried very hard to think, but there was still enough booze in his bloodstream to make things muzzy at the edges. There had been a plan when he'd started this, and he was pretty sure that this hadn't been how it had gone.
"Fuck," Fortune said.
"Didn't work?"
"It's not here," Fortune said. "These . . . they aren't . . ."
His voice wasn't angry anymore. More sad. Fortune hung his head, and Jonathan put a hand on the guy's shoulder.
"So here's the thing," Jonathan said. "I'm a real asshole sometimes. I didn't mean to—"
"I am asshole too," Lohengrin said, putting his hand on Fortune's other shoulder. Jonathan caught their reflection in the vanity mirror. With Fortune's head low and the pair of them flanking the guy, it looked like an old print he'd seen of Lancelot and Merlin supporting King Arthur.
Nice detail, he thought. He filed it away for when he wrote the book. Fortune's head came back up.
"I know where it is," he said. Before Jonathan could think through what the words really meant, Fortune was gone. Jonathan and Lohengrin fouled each other trying to get out of the dressing room door, so Fortune got to Peregrine's study well before them.
It was another beautiful room—soft light, teak furniture, soft carpet. One wall was dedicated to images and mementos of the life of one of the world's more glamorous wild cards. Magazine covers, newspaper clippings, plaques with her name and the appreciation of President Barnett and Senator Hart-mann. Three Emmy awards. A People's Choice award. Trophies and plaques detailing her charity work and other random appreciations. Pictures of her floating above the New York skyline, flying past the Eiffel Tower. Standing, wings spread and eyebrows raised, before the pyramids. Jonathan was struck by how young she looked back then. 1987. He'd been six years old.
Fortune sat on the corner of the wide, low, wooden desk. A simple loop of leather cord hung from his hand, a red bauble at its end. In the dim light, the setting looked brass. Jonathan and Lohengrin both stopped dead.