Radiant

Read Radiant for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Radiant for Free Online
Authors: Cynthia Hand
Tags: Science-Fiction, Juvenile Fiction, Fantasy & Magic, Love & Romance
eager to change the subject. “You’re an Intangere?”
    “Yes, I think we’ve established that,” he says wryly.
    “And what do you do?”
    “Are you asking if I flit around from cloud to cloud, sing in a heavenly choir?”
    I take a bite, chew for a minute, shrug. “I guess I don’t know what it is that angels actually do.”
    He takes a long drink of his wine. “You’re direct,” he says. “I like that.”
    I smile and wait for him to answer my question.
    “We do angel business,” he says after a minute. Smirks. “You mere mortals wouldn’t understand.”
    “Angel business, like helping the souls of the dead find their way to heaven or hell?” I glance over at Angela, who gives me a warning look. She’s been superquiet this entire time. For once I’m the one asking all the questions.
    “Yes, some angels handle the souls of the dead,” he says.
    I remember my mother telling me once that more than a hundred people on this planet die every minute. That’s a lot of angels. “So is that what you do? Look after the dead, guide them toward the light, that kind of thing?”
    “No,” he says. “Not that there’s anything wrong with that. I’m what you would call a muse.”
    Angela looks surprised. “A muse?”
    “I inspire people,” he says, like it’s something ordinary people do as a vocation: professional inspirer.
    “You never told me that,” she says. “Have you ever inspired me?”
    He raises his eyebrows, laughs when she gasps.
    “I thought I was your muse,” she says with a flicker of disappointment. “Can you put an idea directly into my head?”
    “I can give you an image, a line of music, a word, anything I want. But most of the time I don’t have to. I simply provide a brief moment of clarity. You fill in the rest.”
    “That’s amazing,” she says, and I can almost see her mentally going over the stuff she’s done around him, the poems she’s written or the music she’s played on her violin for him, trying to understand how he might have inspired her.
    “Yeah,” I agree, if only to be agreeable. “It is. Very cool.” Truthfully, though, the idea of an angel who’s able to plant ideas in my head without me knowing about it doesn’t sound like good news to me. Who knows what else he could plant there? It’s a little bit Invasion of the Body Snatchers , in my opinion. I make a silent note to keep my mental barrier up around him, the way my mom taught me, so he won’t be able to read my mind. Or stick stuff in it.
    “It’s a small gift, compared to what others can do,” he says modestly, but I can tell he’s flattered. I guess he doesn’t get to take credit for what he does that often. And I don’t for a second believe that being a muse is all this guy can do.
    “So give us an example,” Angela says. “Something you inspired.”
    “Oh, I don’t know. ‘Once upon a time,’” he says. “I came up with that.”
    Angela’s eyes widen. “You came up with the phrase ‘once upon a time’?”
    “It was a long time ago.” He eats a bite of food while we stare at him. “Humans are brilliant in their own right. And quick to learn, I’ve found.”
    “So you’re a teacher? Officially, I mean?” she asks, her voice a little more high-pitched than normal, maybe because she wants him to teach her more “officially.”
    “It was my duty, once upon a time , to teach humans,” he says.
    “What did you teach them?” I ask.
    “How to write. Some have argued that was a bad thing, giving them the written word.” He smirks. “Leads to all kinds of trouble. But that was my job.”
    I have a sudden flash of this guy scratching out the ABCs on a cave wall for a group of awestruck Neanderthals. Then it occurs to me. He’s an angel, but he doesn’t give off an angel vibe. No sorrow. No joy. Which means that I don’t know what side he’s on.
    Which means I can’t trust him.
    Once again I get the distinct feeling that something bad is going to happen, that

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