Secret Worlds (126 page)

Read Secret Worlds Online

Authors: Rebecca Hamilton,Conner Kressley,Rainy Kaye,Debbie Herbert,Aimee Easterling,Kyoko M.,Caethes Faron,Susan Stec,Linsey Hall,Noree Cosper,Samantha LaFantasie,J.E. Taylor,Katie Salidas,L.G. Castillo,Lisa Swallow,Rachel McClellan,Kate Corcino,A.J. Colby,Catherine Stine,Angel Lawson,Lucy Leroux

The anger was gone and it seemed the old Claribel was back. Her face softened, her voice was light and girlish. “It was the happiest day of my life.” She put her hand back in her lap and faced Skye. “We were both committed to Queen Morgana. She granted us important positions of espionage for the Unseelie Court. Lawren and I pledged to eliminate power all enemies in the Seelie Court.” Her eyes hardened, the fury again blazing. “Everything was perfect until Rowena Watters came into our lives.”

Skye really didn’t want to hear this, she knew where it was heading. She closed her eyes to avoid Claribel’s flushed face and fisted hands.

“She stole my Lawren.”

A sudden clap and loud vibration by her feet made Skye open her eyes.

“Listen to me when I’m talking to you.” Claribel had slammed a hand by Skye’s legs and her face was only inches away. “Your mother must have cast some kind of love spell on Lawren to make him forsake me. Oh, sure, he’d had flings with humans before, what fairy doesn’t? But this time he got caught in a powerful witch’s snare.”

Skye felt the need to defend her mom. “They must have been truly in love to risk everything.”

A bolt of energy exploded on her right kneecap and Skye curled up in a ball on the cold concrete.

Claribel’s voice was shrill and her pudgy body shook with anger. “Rowena brainwashed him. And he didn’t just turn his back on me after centuries together. Lawren forsake his allegiance to the Unseelie Court and turned traitor.”

Skye digested the words and translated their true meaning. Claribel’s husband and her mother had fallen in love and Lawren changed because of that forbidden love – he had wanted to switch to the side of lightness and goodness. Good for Mom. And good for – her real father.

“When I found out about
you,
it was the cruelest insult of all. When I confronted him about his betrayal to me, to our kind, Lawren didn’t deny it. He actually said” – she spit out the words with contempt – “that he loved you, wanted to be a true father to you.”

She was their child, Rowena and Lawren’s daughter. This was how she became half-fae. She actually had a father who loved and wanted her. No wonder the man she had thought of as her real father wanted nothing to do with her. Her mind traveled back to age five when she had come down the stairs for her dance recital. He had gaped at her costume, focusing in on the angel wings. The revulsion that flashed in his eyes was the moment she realized, even as a kid, that he didn’t love her.

He knew Skye wasn’t his, he even knew the true father wasn’t human.

Skye struggled to a standing position, placing her weight on the uninjured leg. “Where is he? I want to meet my father.”

“He’s dead you idiotic half breed.”

Dead. She would never meet him.

“The Unseelie Court hunted him down and killed him. Nobody escapes us.” Claribel arose and narrowed a meaningful gaze on Skye. “Nobody.”

Chapter 18
Trapped

Nobody. A half breed. Nothing special.

Claribel’s words pummeled like blows at Skye’s deepest insecurities and fears. She had never measured up or fit in anywhere. Not at home, not at school, and not in this new world she had fallen into.

Outside the basement window, Dark Fae murmurs rose in a tide of excitement. Claribel was going to kill her and she was powerless to stop it. She didn’t have Callie’s or her mom’s witchcraft abilities to fight back.

Only a couple of hours remained until midnight and Samhain’s arrival. Soon after the moon’s next rising she would be dead and with her death the balance of power in the fae world would shift. The Unseelie Faes’ strength would increase and the Seelie Fae would eventually serve the darkness or face extinction.

The iron medallion warmed where it lay at the center of her chest. She raised her right hand and lightly rubbed the solid disc. If she couldn’t help the Seelie fairies, Kheelan would never be free. Even worse, he would end up serving the Dark Fae—helpless to cruel taskmasters more heartless than Finvorra.

If they let him live.

She could not—would not let that happen. Callie’s words whispered in her mind,
you are more powerful than you know. Everything you need is within.

“I’ve waited for this night a long time,” Claribel said. “You, even more than Rowena, ruined my life. Lawren wouldn’t have turned his back on me for just your tawdry witch of a mother. He did it for you.”

Skye set to work, focused on putting up a protective energy shield against the vibrations of anger shooting from Claribel. Too bad she had lost the hematite crystal when she had flung off her coat.

“I hope Callie knew what she was talking about,” Skye muttered.

She tuned out Claribel’s raging and found that calm center inside herself to chant and raise energy for her intention. Silently, she formed the words in her mind.

Kindly spirits draw unto me

Earth, air, fire and sea

Around me form a protective bubble

In my hour of doubt and trouble

Pearly white, opalite rays

Cast now this Dark Fae away

I command it with my spell

Useless is this Claribel.

As I will, so mote it be.

Smoky strands of white and purple swirled like an aura over Skye.
It actually worked
. With every pulse of her heart, the colors grew more intense and thick.

“What’s this?” Claribel screamed.

Through the shield, Skye saw and heard the shrieking fairy but she no longer feared the creature.

Claribel raised a wand and the blue streak spewed like lightning from its tip. The energy hit the pulsating shield of color around Skye but sputtered as harmless as a child’s sparkler firecracker.

The sparking stopped and there was no sound except the breath of the two facing each other. Inhale, exhale, inhale . . .

“It takes too much energy to keep that shield up.” Claribel spoke softly, calmly. “Face it, time is running out. You can’t hold it much longer.”

“Long enough,” Skye said.

“Long enough for what? If you’re waiting for Kheelan to come save you, you’re doomed.”

Dread crept through every pore in her body. Claribel knew about her and Kheelan. “What have you done to him?” Despite the fear, Skye’s voice matched Claribel’s in calm control.

“You will never see him again.”

The pain lashed, a hundred times worse than any poisonous fairy dart.

“Liar!” Skye screamed.

Her concentration in maintaining the protection shield shattered and the white and purple clouds of smoke evaporated. Too late, Skye realized her mistake. She stood, exposed, to the cunning enemy. A blinding flash of blue exploded and she was out.

He should have been gone hours ago. Kheelan frowned at the blackened sky, visible through the kitchen window, as he poured another endless round of scotch and soda.

“Be quick with it, changeling,” boomed one of the unwelcome guests.

Unwelcome to Kheelan anyway. Finvorra had greeted the three traveling Fae, all as thoroughly reprobate and uncouth as himself, with hearty enthusiasm. They had arrived unexpected in the late afternoon as Kheelan had been about to leave and check on Skye. They came to visit their old pal and celebrate the coming Samhain together. Which meant they would be staying overnight.

He balanced the four drinks on a tray and brought it to the table.

“ – and then I tells her ‘Aye, ye right bonnie darlin’ but don’t ye be bletherin’ all the morn’ after me bender last eve,’” said one of the guests, slamming a beefy fist on the wooden table. Tumblers of watered-down drinks sloshed over from the impact.

Finvorra snapped his fingers for Kheelan to clean the mess. He set down the freshened drinks, gathered up a few dirty dishes and left to get a towel. Alone in the kitchen, Kheelan snatched a clean dishrag and bunched it in his fists. The old coots should have drunk themselves under the table by now.

Was Skye safe? He couldn’t stop thinking of his last glimpse of her—pale, bewildered, and furious with him. ‘I can take care of myself,’ she had boasted.

She had no idea what fairies could do. Right now, she was a valuable commodity to the Seelies and a dangerous menace to the Unseelies. One side would make a move tonight, a preemptive strike for tomorrow night’s battles.

Kheelan stared out the window. With the setting sun, each passing minute of darkness cloaked his bright dream of freedom until hope became only a distant memory. The blood moon rained down without mercy. The Fae battle would begin with its next night’s dawning.

“Get yer arse in here, changeling,” Finvorra growled from the next room. He liked to be extra nasty when guests were around.

Kheelan reentered their room and began mopping up the table.

“It’s a braw bricht moonlit nicht,” a guest noted with a yawn.

‘A brilliant bright moonlit night’, Kheelan understood the familiar saying, so popular amongst the Fae. The four fairies raised their glasses for yet another toast, even as they slumped in their chairs.

He had to get out of here. Had to protect Skye. Kheelan glared at the key ring holder by the doorway. The empty hook mocked him – where his motorcycle and truck keys should be hanging, it was bare. Finvorra had made sure Kheelan didn’t slip out while he was entertaining his old friends. If he tried to escape, they would notice immediately and overtake him. If he tried to sneak out, he was still stranded miles out in the country – far from any transportation. Even if he hitchhiked, the odds of a passing driver picking him up before Finvorra missed him were almost nil.

A loud snore rumbled from the other room. Kheelan softly padded to the doorway to check in on his captors.

A giant of a fairy was sprawled in a chair, head lolling to one side in slumber. The other three yawned and stretched.

“Methinks a wee nap would be right braw,” one of them said, rubbing misshapen fingers over his broad face.

Kheelan went over. “I’ll be glad to show each of you to a spare bedroom.”

The nearest fairy patted his arm. “Ye be a good Tacharan,” he mumbled, shoving a chair to the floor as he rose unsteadily to his feet.

Kheelan had never been happier to serve the Fae as he directed each of the guests to a bed. Finvorra settled into his recliner by the fireplace and Kheelan watched and waited for the sleep to overcome, a hawk poised for flight. Once he slept, he’d find those damn truck keys. If the fates smiled favorably on him this Samhain, it would be his last look at any Guardian.

***

Incessant ringing . . . once, twice, three times. On the fourth ring, sensation slowly returned to her numbed nerves. The vibrating rhythm of the ring flowed through her body. Skye shivered and realized she lay on a cold, hard surface. Still, she couldn’t piece together any cohesive meaning to these isolated impressions. Her eyes opened and it was like looking into an old black and white TV set in the middle of a severe thunderstorm – all gray static and only dark outlines for shapes.

Angry words were spoken in clipped sentences. She knew that voice. Skye puzzled over it.

More sensation crept through her foggy brain. A burning on her wrists and a sound like a zipper shutting. More pain and the zipper noise by each ankle. Rough hands shook her shoulders.

“Listen to me, Skye. I want you conscious for this.”

A face loomed inches away. It was pale and the sagging skin lined with wrinkles. Eyelids of green sparkles and fuchsia lipstick smudged on thin, compressed lips.

Claribel.

Skye jerked back and tried to stand, only to feel the constraint of hot metal cutting into wrists and ankles.

Handcuffed.

“You are temporarily spared,” said Claribel. “That was Queen Morgana’s personal guard, calling with orders for me to keep you chained while I meet with the Queen at once to discuss what to do with you.” Claribel thoughtfully tapped the side of her cheek with bejeweled fingers. “I suspect armed guards will transport you to the celestial crystal sight and parade you in front of the Seelie Court fairies. Show them how close they were to vanquishing our race and then crush their spirits completely by a public execution.” She leaned into Skye until they were nose-to-nose. The smell of violets was overpowering.

“By all rights, killing you should be
my
privilege.” She jerked a fistful of Skye’s red and purple hair and twisted it viciously. “I’ve been waiting for this moment for eighteen years. When you walked in my shop, I knew who you were at once. Figured a silly twit like you would follow Tanner to college and be drawn to work here. I counted on that four years ago when I opened The Green Fairy.”

Skye drew a ragged breath when Claribel released her hair.

Claribel smiled and delicately traced small circles on Skye’s cheeks. “Until later my pretty,” she whispered. Abruptly, she faced the window and screamed, “Watch her closely,” to the Dark Fae watching outside. With no look back at her captive, Claribel made her way up the creaky steps and turned out the lights. The turn of the key in the lock echoed the basement like a ricocheting bullet.

She drank in deep, violet-scent free breaths. Claribel was gone. For now.

The relief didn’t last long. Her scalp was raw and tender. The iron in the handcuffs and leg restraints burned into her flesh. She checked their tightness. There was some give between the cuffs and flesh, so the burning had to be caused by her new fairy metal allergy. Terrific. Claribel had done a good job of restraining her. The handcuffs and leg irons were connected by a chain bolted around a concrete column. She stood and checked out her range of motion. Only about three feet in a circular direction.

Even more than her injuries, being chained like a dog preyed on her mind. What if a fire started? Or what if something happened to Claribel and she was stuck here twenty-four hours until Samhain’s midnight?

Where was Kheelan?

Please goddesses let him be alive
. Claribel’s threats that she would never see him again were because of Claribel’s intention to kill her. It didn’t mean Kheelan had been hurt or was . . . dead.

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