Authors: Melissa Marr
Tags: #Romance, #Juvenile Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fiction
She nodded.
"Time to yourself, huh?" Mitchell grinned. "You don't look like you're by yourself."
"We were." Seth raised his eyebrow and inclined his head toward the door. "We still could be."
"Nope."
Mitchell popped the top on a can.
Seth took several deep breaths. "If you're going to be here for a while, turn on some tunes."
"Actually, we thought you might want to go out," the girl who'd been clinging to Jimmy said.
One of the other girls—the one watching Seth—moved to the side, just a little, and Aislinn caught a glimpse of tiny horns poking through her hair, of leathery wings curled behind her.
How did
she
walk in here? Looking like that?
Only the strongest of the fey could be surrounded by this much steel and hold on to
a glamour
. That was one of the rules that had given Aislinn the most comfort over the years.
The winged girl moved toward Seth slowly, like each step took a lot of concentration. "We can't really stay long. Come with us? There's supposed to be a good band down at the Crow's Nest." She offered Aislinn a catty smile. "I'd invite you, too, but they're being strict about the age thing after the raid. Eighteen only, you know?"
Slowly Aislinn set the bowl down and went over to stand in front of Seth, between him and the faery. "Seth isn't available."
Seth put his hands on her hips, touching her but not restraining her.
Glaring at the faery, Aislinn leaned back against Seth.
How dare she come here? Who sent her?
The idea of Seth being vulnerable to them made her almost violently angry.
"Well, this is fun," Mitchell said.
Nodding, Jimmy sat down with the pan of half-cold pasta and a fork. "My money's on Ash."
The faery kept coming toward the kitchen.
Aislinn put her arm out in front of the faery. "I think you need to leave."
"Really?"
She wrinkled her nose.
"Yes." Aislinn put a hand on the faery's wrist, not gripping it, but resting her fingers there. Just like at school, contact with the faery made Aislinn's Sight clearer.
Aislinn pushed, gently.
The faery winced and stumbled. Her eyebrows shot up as she gave Aislinn a strange look.
Recovering quickly, the faery murmured, "Another night, then."
"No." Seth slid his arms around Aislinn's waist. "I'm exactly where I want to be."
Jimmy and Mitchell exchanged another goofy grin.
"Man, you need to share your secrets." Mitchell got up and picked up his beer. At a quick glance in his date's direction, she came over to stand next to him.
Mitchell continued, "Not like you ever have trouble getting—" He cleared his throat, and his date smacked him on the arm. He grinned.
"All I'm saying is whatever he's doing"—he inclined his head toward the back of the train where Seth's bedroom was—"must work. Ash hardly ever even speaks. He's got her ready to start a fight over him."
The faery hadn't moved. She trailed her fingertips down her cleavage, slowly. "You'd have fun. More than you'll get here."
Aislinn stepped away from Seth. She wrapped her fingers around the girl's wrist and walked over to the door, tugging the faery behind her. For such a strong faery, she was unbelievably easy to drag along.
Maybe she's weak from all the steel.
"Go." Aislinn opened the door and shoved the faery forward. "Stay out."
The faeries outside were all watching. Several giggled gleefully.
The vine-girl in the suit was there again. She looked up from her newest menagerie of origami animals—which were now walking around as if they were alive. "Told you, Cerise," she said, and went back to folding more leaves. "That sort of approach doesn't work if they're already in love."
Aislinn let go of the encroaching faery. "Stay away from him."
"For the night"—the faery looked back inside, her wings opening and closing behind her, slowly, like a butterfly at rest—"but really, I think he could do so much better."
Freaking faeries.
Aislinn opened her mouth to say something else.
"Not interested," Seth called from behind her.
"Bitch," said one of the girls to Aislinn as she left. She stomped out like she had a right to be offended. "You didn't need to grab her like that. She was just flirting."
The other said, "Guys don't like pushy girls. They like ladies."
At the door Jimmy paused and deadpanned, "Yeah. It's really not a total turn-on." Then he cracked up. "You get tired of Seth …"
Mitchell shoved him. "Shut up."
Invisible to everyone but her and the faeries, several of the ever-changing group of fey things outside scurried off.
Aislinn shut the door and leaned against it.
Seth was already
back
at the nasty-smelling concoction, stirring it. "Since you don't seem the jealous sort, I'm guessing she was a faery."
"Wings and all."
She went over, pulled him down to her, and kissed him. "But I might be a bit more the jealous sort than I realized."
He grinned.
"Works for me."
He put down the spoon and followed her over to the counter.
"Thought they didn't like steel."
"They don't. That's why she was trying to get you to go out. She was strong enough to come in, but not strong enough to stay long. She couldn't even hold her glamour very well." She picked up another handful of herbs to crush. "Do
me
a favor?"
"Always."
"Stay home tonight." She picked out a few thicker stems. She glanced back at the door, a suddenly thin barrier against the growing number of faeries outside.
"I could ask you the same," he murmured. He held her tightly.
She closed her eyes and leaned her cheek on his chest. "If I don't get answers soon, Grams is going to pull me out of school. I can't stall her much longer, and I don't want to lie to her and say they've gone away."
"I could come with you. …"
"He's not going to talk to me if I bring you along. I need him to think
I'm believing
him." She stretched up so she could kiss him, and then added, "If this doesn't work, we'll try something else."
He looked worried, afraid—things she didn't want to see, didn't want him to feel—but finally he nodded. "Be safe, okay?"
"I'll do my best. …"
Because if she didn't, everything would be taken away— school, friends, Seth, everything.
Keenan needed to let something slip. The faeries needed to say something that could help her figure out how to get rid of him. They simply
had
to.
Once they take you and you taste the food…you cannot come back. You are changed…and live with them for ever. —
The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries
by W. Y. Evans-Wentz (1911)
A half hour later Aislinn walked down
What if I hadn't been there? Would they hurt him?
She hadn't wanted to leave Seth, or meet Keenan, or deal with the whole debacle, but she needed answers. Keenan had them.
He stood outside the entrance to the carnival, looking so normal that it was hard to remember that he was one of them, and not just court fey but a king. He reached out as if he'd embrace her.
"Aislinn."
She stepped backward, easily dodging him.
"I'm so glad you came." Keenan looked terribly serious.
At a loss for what to say, she shrugged.
"Shall we?" He held out his arm, like they were at a formal dance or something.
"Sure." She ignored his arm—and his brief frown—as she followed him toward the maze of booths that had seemingly sprung up overnight.
People milled around, an impossibly large crowd. Families and couples played games on every side. Many of them had sweet-smelling drinks—some sort of golden slushy thing.
"You're just so"—he stared at her, smiling that inhuman smile—"I'm just so honored that you joined me."
Aislinn nodded, like he made sense. He didn't.
This is ridiculous.
His too-eager comments made her feel increasingly uncomfortable.
Beside her, a group of girls tried to throw tiny plastic balls onto glass platters. Overhead the lights of the Ferris wheel sparkled. People laughed and cuddled close to one another as they walked by.
Then Keenan took her hand, and suddenly her Sight was so clear that she gasped. Everywhere she looked, glamours faded. The workers running the booths, the concessions, the rides…
They're all fey.
All the carnies and quite a few of the guests were faeries.
Oh my God.
She'd never seen such a large crowd of faeries before.
Everywhere she looked, disguised faeries smiled back at her, friendly and happy.
Why are so many faeries wearing human faces?
Some real humans milled about, playing rigged games and riding rickety rides, but the faeries didn't stare at them. She was the one they all watched.
Keenan waved to a group of faeries who had called out to him.
"Old friends.
Do you want to meet them?"
"No." She bit down on her lip and looked around again, feeling her chest tighten.
He frowned.
"Not right now." She forced a smile, hoping he'd think her nervousness was just shyness.
Control.
She took a deep breath and tried to sound friendly. "I thought we were going to get to know each other."
"Right."
He smiled like she'd given him some rare and precious gift. "What can I tell you?"
"Umm, what about your family?"
Aislinn stumbled, feet as unsteady as her breaking.
"I live with my uncles." he said as he led her forward, past a group of faeries that—until a moment ago—looked like they could go to Bishop O.C.
Several gestured toward her, but no one approached. In fact, the others moved out of Keenan's path as he led her toward a row of booths where the now-revealed faeries ran carnival games.
"Your uncles?" she repeated, feeling increasingly doubtful that coming was a wise idea. She pulled her hand free.
"Right, the guys who were at school."
Faeries.
Just like almost everyone here.
She felt dizzy.
She tried again. "What about your parents?"
"My father died before I was born"—he paused, looking not sad, but angry—"but everything I
am is
his gift."
Did faeries die?
She wasn't at all sure how to respond to his odd comment, so she simply said, "My mom is gone too.
Childbirth."
"I'm sorry." He took her hand again, squeezed it affectionately, and intertwined his fingers with hers. "I'm sure she was a good woman. And she must've been lovely to be your mother."
"I'm not much like her." Aislinn swallowed hard. All she had was pictures. In the pictures Grams had around the house, her mother always looked haunted, like she couldn't quite handle the things she could see. Grams never spoke of her mother's last year, as if it hadn't existed.
"What about your father? Is he a good man?" He stopped, holding her hand while they stood there, surrounded by faeries, talking about their families.
If she hadn't been able to see the oddly shaped eyes and strange smiles on the faeries who listened, it might seem so very normal. It wasn't.
She started to walk away, going toward one of the concession stands where they were selling those sweet-smelling drinks.
"Aislinn?"
She shrugged, more comfortable talking about a father she knew nothing of than the mother who'd given her the Sight. "Who knows? Grams
doesn't
know who he is, and Mom's not here to tell us."
"At least you have your grandmother." He reached up with his free hand and stroked her cheek. "I'm glad you have had that, a loving caretaker."
She started to answer, but headed toward them were Pointy-Face and about six of the other faeries who liked to linger at Shooters, harassing the regulars, chasing her away from the pool hall with their very presence. She froze, unable to move, years of instinct overriding logic.
"Aislinn?
What's wrong?" He moved in front of her, blocking her view of everyone and everything but him. "Have I offended you?"
"No. I'm just"—she offered him what she hoped was a convincing smile and lied—"chilly."
He shrugged off his jacket and draped it over her shoulders, gently.
"How's that?"