Drink Deep - Chloe Neill [19]
There was a pause, probably while he discussed logistics with Catcher or my grandfather.
“We’ll meet you in front of the pier,” he said. “Ten minutes.”
That was just long enough for Jonah and me to walk back the length of the pier . . . and hopefully not get called out by a security guard.
“We’ll be there,” I promised him, and we set out for land again.
We walked quietly back to the rendezvous point. There was no sight of the guards, who’d probably abandoned their routes to stare at the lake. Trouble emerged only after Jonah had leapt the gate. I was a few feet behind him, preparing myself mentally to make the hop again. Much to my surprise, I performed the vault much more gracefully and was on my way down again when the screaming began. The noise was just enough to jar my concentration. I lost my form midair, and hit the ground in an ungainly stumble. It took a few steps, but I finally ended up on my feet and began scanning the grounds for the source of the screams.
Easier said than done. The noise echoed weirdly off the buildings on the pier and Lake Pointe Tower, the clover-shaped tower that sat between Navy Pier and the rest of Streeterville.
Jonah homed in on the drama first, pointing toward a patch of green space in front of the pier. A tangle of people—maybe a dozen—were yelling and screaming into the otherwise quiet night air. From the tingle in the air—a tingle that was being sucked back into the vacuum behind us—it was clear the scuffle was magical.
We jogged over, and I nearly ran into Jonah when he stopped short, eyes wide on the scene in front of him. He barely managed to stutter out a response. “I’ve seen pictures, but never in person. They are—Wow. There’s so many of them. And they’re so—with the dresses and the hair—”
Jonah was right. There were so many of them, and the dresses and hair definitely made them noticeable. They were petite and curvy, all with long hair, all with short dresses. Each dress was a different color, corresponding to the chunk of the Chicago River for which they were responsible.
A single nymph—the redhead from the picture Kelley had shown me—was surrounded by ten or twelve others. They were currently only yelling obscenities, but they looked more than eager to start rumbling.
I’d seen River nymphs fight before, and I didn’t want any part of it. They used nails and pulled hair. I preferred a crescent kick to the head any day.
“Those are the River nymphs,” I told Jonah, then nudged him forward. “Come on.”
We reached the circle of nymphs within seconds, but they couldn’t have cared less. They were too busy berating the redheaded nymph in the middle of their circle. And while they may have been cute and petite and all things womanly and manicured, they had vicious little potty mouths. Even Jonah cringed when a blond nymph made a rather unflattering comparison between the redhead’s mother and a female dog.
“That is not ladylike,” he muttered.
“Welcome to the world of the nymphs,” I said, and stepped forward, just as I’d seen Jeff do once before. “Ladies, maybe we could calm down a bit and cool off?”
Whether too fired up to notice the suggestion of détente or too unmoved to care, they ignored me. During an effort to punctuate her insult with a physical threat, a brunette’s stiletto caught in the grass. She stumbled forward, but the rest of the nymphs thought the move was a threat. With dolphin-pitched squeals and the sounds of tearing fabric and stomping heels, the entire circle erupted into violence.
Unfortunately, I’d edged too close to them and got sucked into the tangle.
I covered my head with an arm and pushed my way into the middle of the circle, trying to reach the redhead and pull her out of the scrum. I squinted against flying nails and winced at the force of small, pointy elbows. I’d stepped into their fight, so knocking them out wasn’t a politically viable move. But neither was I going to lose an eye to a nymph catfight.
I’d just managed to get a hand on the redhead’s dress when a stiletto caught me on