spare key so she unlocked the door. My grandmother was gone and there was blood on the back porch.â
Not good. âHow much blood?â
Iluh swallowed. âJust a smudge.â
âShow her,â my mom said.
Iluh reached into her canvas bag. âWe found this next to the blood.â
She pulled a Ziploc bag out of her purse. Inside it were three coarse black hairs. About nine inches long, they looked like something you would pull out of a horseâs mane.
âWe tried going to the police, but they said we had to wait forty-eight hours before she can be declared missing.â
I opened the bag and took a sniff. Ugh. An acrid, bitter, dry kind of stench, mixed with a sickening trace of rotting blood. I shook the hairs out on the table and carefully touched one. Magic nipped my finger. The hair turned white and broke apart, as if burned from the inside out. Bad magic. Familiar bad magic.
Iluh gasped.
âI told you,â my mother said with pride in her voice. âMy daughter is the White Tiger. She can banish evil.â
âNot all evil,â I said, and pushed a sticky-note pad toward Iluh. âCould you write your grandmotherâs address down for me? Iâll go visit the house.â
Iluh scribbled it down and got a key out of her purse. âHere is the spare key.â She wrote down another address. âThis is my parentsâ house. Iâll be over there today. Is there anything I can do? Do you want me to come with you?â
âNo.â She would just get in the way.
âDo I need to pay you?â
My mother froze in the kitchen, mortally offended.
People often confused ethnicity and cultural upbringing. Just because someone looks Japanese or Indian, doesnât mean they have strong cultural ties to their country of origin. Cultural identity was more than skin deep. Because of the nature of my magic, I was known to many Indonesians in Atlanta, and learning about the culture and myths of my parents wasnât only a part of my heritage, it was part of what made me better at what I did. Iluh chose to have less ties to Indonesian families. Culturally she was more mainstream. You canât be offended by someone who simply didnât know how things worked.
âYou donât have to pay me,â I explained gently. âI do this because itâs my obligation to the community. Generations agomy family was given the gift of this magic so we could help others. Itâs my duty and Iâm happy to do it.â
Iluh swallowed. âIâm so sorry.â
âNo, no, Iâm sorry you felt uncomfortable. Please donât worry about it.â
âThank you,â she said. âPlease find her. She is my only grandmother.â
âIâll do what I can,â I told her.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
I walked Iluh out to the door. When I returned, my mother crossed her arms. âPay? What, like youâre some kind of maid?â
âLet it go, Mom. She just didnât know.â
âShe should know. Thatâs my point. Are you going over there?â
âYes. Let me just get dressed.â
âGood,â my mother said. âIâll make you dinner while youâre gone. That way when you come back, there will be something to eat.â
No! âThank you so much, but Iâm okay.â
âDali!â My mother opened the refrigerator. âThere is nothing in here, except rice. You might have to purify a house today. You donât even have cakes for the offering.â
There was nothing in there because I was planning to store leftovers from Jimâs and my dinner. Jim, who was currently hiding upstairs and whom I had to sneak out of here. âI was going to go grocery shopping today. And Iâll steal some of your donuts for the offering.â I had apples in the fridge and my garden was in bloom. That would be plenty for the offering.
âIâll make you something to