A Kind of Magic (35 page)

Read A Kind of Magic Online

Authors: Shanna Swendson

Tags: #FIC009010 FICTION / Fantasy / Contemporary; FIC044000 FICTION / Contemporary Women; FIC010000 FICTION / Fairy Tales, Folk Tales, Legends & Mythology

Leonie strode down the middle of the throne room toward the dais until she was only a few feet from the steps. Josephine faced her from the top of the dais, but although she was much taller and had the high ground, the much smaller Leonie still somehow looked like she was lording it over the intruder. “I don’t believe we’ve met,” she said in her sweet drawl. “I’m Leonie Drake, queen of this Realm. And you are?”

“The person who should hold this throne by right,” Josephine replied. She’d changed a lot since Michael had last seen her. She’d shed the glamour of an older human—and why had he never thought to look for a glamour on her?—for that of a fairy. But even there, he got the sense it had nothing to do with her real appearance.

“Nana, this is our many greats aunt,” Sophie said from her position behind Josephine, where she was being held by two fae men. “She’s our ancestor’s sister.”

Michael heard soft “oh” sounds from the enchantresses behind him. It did explain a lot. If her current glamour was at all based on her real appearance, he could see some resemblance between her and Sophie, Leonie, and Emily.

Leonie never lost her southern belle charm. “So pleased to meet you, though I would have preferred it to be under nicer circumstances. Battles are just so tacky. Anyhow, I imagine you’re not too fond of our branch of the family. First the queen exiles you for trying to usurp her throne, and then she gives up the throne herself.”

“If she didn’t want it, it should have gone to me,” Josephine insisted, her eyes flashing.

“Yes, well, I can see where you might think that,” Leonie said diplomatically. “But I would imagine she saw something in you that was unfit for holding the throne, and I’d have to agree. All this scheming is so unseemly.”

One of the Huntsmen raised his hands as though to attack Josephine, but Sophie cried out, “No! Don’t use fae magic against her. It doesn’t work and it somehow makes her stronger. I can’t quite see why, but that’s what happens.” She looked directly at Michael when she said “can’t quite see why,” and he took that as his cue.

He reached into his pocket for his keychain with a four-leaf clover on it. One side effect of his adventures in the Realm, including being elf-shot and cured and being under a spell or two, was that he could see past all fairy glamour, especially with the aid of a clover. Even Sophie couldn’t see what he could.

As soon as he got a look at Josephine without her glamour, he cringed and dropped the clover back into his pocket. What he saw was something that didn’t even look fae. It once might have been, but it had been warped and twisted into some kind of Gollum-like being. There were traces of a fae beauty that had degenerated, even if it hadn’t aged. Most of the flesh had melted away from her face, leaving her cheekbones in sharp relief and her eyes sunk into hollows. Ugly, lumpy scars ridged her arms and neck. The scars looked like she’d had something inserted into her skin and it had formed a capsule of tissue around it.

He wasn’t sure how to convey this to Sophie in a way she’d find useful. “What have you done to yourself?” he asked. “I’ve heard of body modification, but wow.”

If Sophie was able to read between the lines of that, then he’d be really impressed. Josephine apparently took it as an insult. She moved toward him, glowering, and raised her hands. In that moment, when her guards were distracted, Sophie shifted her weight, throwing all her force against one guard, shoving him into Josephine. The moment he touched her, he screamed and jerked away, his skin smoking in strips where he’d come in contact with her.

Everyone in the throne room stared at that. Even Sophie paused for a moment before regaining her wits and dashing to Michael’s side, away from her captors. “She’s got something inserted under her skin, doesn’t she?” she asked.

“Looks like it. There are lots of lumpy scars.”

“I know what she’s doing,” she said, loud enough for everyone in the room to hear her. “She’s using iron magic.”

 

Fifty-three

 

The Palace

Next

 

Sophie couldn’t believe it had taken her so long to figure it out. “She’s inoculated herself against iron,” she explained. “A little bit of iron stuck under the skin, a bit at a time, over centuries, and eventually a fairy might be able to tolerate being around iron. It’s like an extreme form of allergy shots. Now that the iron’s taken hold in her blood and become part of her, she’s using its power. That’s why she’s been so hard for me to fight. She’s something we haven’t seen before. She must have done the same thing with human food, eating a little at a time until she could tolerate it, but it’s changed her.”

As much trouble as Josephine had caused, Sophie couldn’t help but feel sorry for her. She couldn’t imagine being exiled to a place where everything, including the food, was poison to her, with the poison becoming more pervasive through the centuries. She’d seen what iron did to the fae and had to admire the fortitude of someone who could force herself to tolerate that pain in order to become stronger.

But that didn’t mean she had to let her win. Those centuries of exile had clearly driven Josephine quite mad. She was a danger to both the Realm and the human world.

“Then what do we do?” Michael asked.

Sophie tried to think, but she didn’t think fast enough. Josephine send a blast of power at one of the Huntsmen who drew too close to her, and he cried out in anguish as he fell. “The humans need to protect the fae,” she shouted, moving ahead of the group and gesturing the Huntsmen to move back. Eamon stayed next to Emily. Sophie started to tell him to get out of the way, but it occurred to her that he’d also been inoculating himself, in a way, and was probably better equipped than most fae to be able to resist Josephine’s magic. Mrs. Smith, Athena, and Amelia moved into place to shield the fae.

Most of Josephine’s fae allies stared at her in horror, and some of them moved behind the humans, including both of Sophie’s former guards, one supporting his injured colleague. Maeve slunk out through the door to the kitchen, and Sophie figured they could catch up with her later, since she couldn’t leave the palace.

Nana, apparently noticing that Josephine’s people were deserting her, raised a hand, and the palace doors opened. An army of fae poured in, rushing toward the dais. “I won’t let you harm my people,” Nana said, her voice steely.

“Your people? How can they be
your
people? You are nothing like them. Let me show you what I can do to your people.” A shock wave of power radiated from her. Sophie and her grandmother, along with Athena and Amelia, managed to get a shield up. But it wasn’t enough to shield everyone, and fae around the throne room yelped in pain and collapsed, rubbing at their skin like they were being burned by iron. Even Eamon winced from his position behind Nana and Emily. If the newly arrived fae had planned to help Josephine, they were stopped in their tracks by her attack. Sophie suspected Josephine had just lost all her allies.

“I have an idea,” Mrs. Smith said. She grabbed Michael’s arm. “Come with me, son.”

Sophie missed having his reassuring bulk by her side, even though she knew he wasn’t helping with the shield. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Mrs. Smith pulling a bag out of her shopping cart and starting to distribute some kind of dried herb to the fae. Sophie wasn’t sure if it protected them from iron, but it did seem to ease their pain. At least, the cries and groans were easing.

 Josephine showed no sign of letting up. Sophie wondered if she had any limits. Was it possible for her to use up the power she was channeling from the iron in her body? And if so, how long would that take?

Sophie turned to see that the other enchantresses were still hanging back. “Come on, we need your help,” she called to them. She didn’t know if just three more people would make a difference, but the extra manpower wouldn’t hurt.

“But, defending the fae?” one protested.

“Fighting a fairy,” Amelia countered. “You already noticed that Josephine was never really one of us. She used us, and we nearly let her co-opt our whole society.”

“And do you think we’ll be safe once she makes her way past the fae?” Athena added.

“Enchantress against fae is an awfully old-fashioned way of looking at it, anyway,” Sophie snapped, losing patience with territorial disputes in the face of imminent danger. “Our job was to keep the throne empty, but that nearly killed the Realm. The current queen is descended from both enchanter and fairy. You’re in no danger of her intruding on the human world. But we are in big trouble if her reign is threatened. Now, join us, or you will have to deal with me.”

She didn’t know if it was her logic, her tone of voice, or the look in her eyes that persuaded them, but they finally joined their power to the shield. They seemed to have successfully blocked Josephine from attacking all fae present.

But Josephine didn’t show any signs of tiring. If anything, she was growing stronger. “I’m afraid that just blocking her power is feeding it back to her,” Sophie said, fighting the despair that threatened to overwhelm her.

“We need to dissipate it somehow,” Nana said.

“Or suck it into something—or someone,” Athena suggested.

But what? Or who? No one with any fae blood. That much iron would be deadly, even to Nana, Sophie, or Emily, whose fae ancestry was far removed. There weren’t a lot of people Sophie would trust with that kind of power if there was a chance that absorbing it would give or enhance power. And what would that do to the person who absorbed it? Would it be dangerous?

“Mrs. Smith!” she called out. “What do you know about channeling power?”

The wise woman paused in tending to the ailing fae. “There are a few plants that might be able to take some of it, and with that much iron in her, she should be pretty magnetic.” She returned to her cart and rummaged around a bit, coming up with some plastic zip-close sandwich bags filled with dried leaves. More rummaging, and she had a handful of what looked like refrigerator magnets. She dropped one in a bag, pressed the zipper to close it, and said to Michael, “How’s your throwing arm, son?”

“I’ve played a little baseball.”

“Anyone else?”

“I played fast pitch as a girl,” Athena said.

“I can throw a bit,” Emily said.

Mrs. Smith distributed the bags as she added magnets, and they started pelting Josephine with them. Not all the magnets were strong enough to stick, especially in places where the iron was deep within Josephine’s skin, but some did cling to her, and if the situation hadn’t been so serious, it would have looked rather silly as the terrifying mutant fairy flailed at flying magnetic sandwich bags.

 Sophie could feel some of the power weakening, but Josephine was nowhere close to spent. As soon as she stopped fending off the magnets, she’d still be able to take them on, and they had no good way of fighting her.

“Could a person safely take some of it?” Sophie asked Mrs. Smith.

“It would take someone different,” she said. “Not an ordinary human. But not someone who already has power. It might burn out the existing power.”

That didn’t help much. Where would they find a person who was neither ordinary nor magical?

In the meantime, Josephine was getting angrier. “You humans,” she snarled. “I have had enough of you, living among you all those endless years. You’re weak and powerless, and you don’t even know how to respect your superiors. And then you had to go and take over my Realm! What do I have to do to get rid of you?”

“If you’re unhappy wherever you go, have you considered that maybe you’re the problem?” Sophie asked.

“No! You’re the problem,” Josephine screeched. “You’re ruining everything!” Abruptly, she broke off her attack on the throne room in general and aimed it all at Sophie.

Sophie was more human than fae, but she did still have fae blood, and while Josephine’s power had weakened, it was still there. Sophie felt herself faltering under the attack. It burned, making every nerve in her body feel like it was on fire. She couldn’t summon any kind of magic, either fae or enchantress.

Suddenly, the attack ended, and when Sophie’s vision cleared, she realized that Michael had moved in front of her, shielding her with his larger body and taking the brunt of the blast. Beau rushed the dais, barking and snarling, and he was able to get beneath Josephine’s defenses to bite her on the ankle, distracting her from her attack. The enchantresses got there a split second later, protecting both Sophie and Michael.

But maybe not soon enough. Michael staggered, and Sophie caught him, holding him upright. He recovered a second later, but he didn’t look great. Sophie kept her arm around his waist, and he leaned on her. Beau trotted back to them and raised himself to brace his front paws on Michael’s leg so he could lick Michael’s hand. Sophie found herself smiling in spite of the gravity of the situation. They really did have a little bromance going on.

The fae were recovering from being under attack, now that the worst of it was aimed elsewhere. “Now’s our chance,” Sophie cried out. “If we all join together, we might be strong enough.”

The fae looked at the enchantresses, who glared back. “Do I have to bang your heads together to get you to cooperate?” Nana chided.

One of the Huntsmen attacked first, sending a burst of power at Josephine, followed by Emily, who grinned as her magic joined the Huntsman’s. Soon, everyone else joined in. Even with her superpowered magic, Josephine couldn’t resist the combined forces of fae and enchantress as wave upon wave of magic assaulted her. Mrs. Smith joined in, waving some kind of torch. Sophie’s skin tingled from the proximity to that much power in use. She couldn’t imagine what it would be like on the receiving end of it.

Josephine’s skin started to smoke around the bits of iron, and she shriveled, shrinking in on herself. Her glamour was gone, leaving her bared as a hideous, deformed creature. Sophie couldn’t bear to watch it any longer. “Stop it!” she cried out. “That’s enough!”

They all looked at her like she was crazy. “Soph, what is it?” Emily asked.

“Look at her, she’s beaten. This is just piling on now. And she is family.” She and Michael exchanged a glance and went together to kneel beside what was left of Josephine, lying broken on the ground. Sophie held out her hand to Michael, who seemed to understand what she wanted and got a knife out of his pocket, opening it before giving it to her. Working quickly and gently, Sophie excised the iron from Josephine’s body, magically healing the wounds as she went along. With each piece that was removed, Josephine looked more and more like a regular fairy and less like the creature she’d become.

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