The Whispers of The Sprite (The Whispers series #1) (15 page)

 

‘Has any other fairy ever become an immortal human?’ I continue. I can tell that he isn’t happy answering all these questions. He is tensing his jaw.
 

 

‘The legend says that a few hundred years ago a
fae
became human by taking the life of a changeling.’

 

I’m stunned by this revelation – this would be the perfect solution to becoming an immortal human. His life would be so different. When we reach the cliffs, we carry on walking to be as far as we can from the pathway. The sun is rising, and I inhale the fresh air, enjoying every moment. The sea looks calm, but the grey clouds slowly begin to fill the sky and it looks like it will start raining soon.
 

 

‘So it's possible?’ I ask. He stops and looked at me with pain in his eyes.

 

‘I would probably have to kill the last changeling to
fulfil
this desire, but first of all, I would have to find the last changeling. But as the changelings aren’t in this world anymore it's impossible.’

 

‘So what else does the legend say? Who can become human?’

 

‘As far I remember, it is someone who has had enough and has nothing to lose, but I am not really sure because at the time it wasn’t in my interest to find out more.’

 

‘Hold on – a few hundred years ago? How old are you, then?’ I am feeling foolish; I have never asked Gabriel his age. He smiles a little and he holds me close to his chest. He is warm.

 

‘I am not sure. I don't age like you,’ he says, and I can’t react. It's not the answer that I expected.

 

‘What do you mean that you don't know? When you were born?’

 

'I think in 1887, so that makes me 125. I don't think about the years. I will die eventually, but it will take me longer. We get older differently,' he answers, looking for my reaction, but I am speechless.

 

I always believed that Gabriel was older, but thought he was only slightly older than me. I never imagined that he could be over a hundred years old.

 

It takes us another ten minutes before we reach the secluded spot between the rocks. Gabriel presses his lips against mine, tasting me again, while I wrap myself around his warm body. It’s too cold to enjoy the stunning view, but I dissolve all my unnecessary emotions and grasp this moment of short pleasure. Gabriel is wearing a jacket, but his skin seems to be unaffected by the wind and cold. I unpack the blanket, and we sit down by the rocks. I brought sandwiches, fruit and fresh coffee.
 

 

‘It's delicious,’ he announces, chewing my sandwich. ‘I would like to stay here forever and die with you in my arms.’

 

‘I don't know. I think it's too cold for forever,’ I say, smiling. It's bright but it's getting colder and as I predicted, it's started raining; the weather is against us. We are sitting on the blanket, wrapped in each other and enjoying the glorious view of the sea and staring at the waves when suddenly Gabriel’s body tenses. I look at him. He gets up, alerted that something isn’t right. Without any warning, a familiar Sprite appears from nowhere in front of us. I recognise him straight away. It is the tall blond
fae
that followed me home. He is staring at Gabriel with disbelief in his eyes.
 

 

‘Adam,’ says Gabriel, narrowing his blue eyes, and squeezing my hand tightly. I can feel that he is afraid.

 

‘Well, well, my friend. When I followed your human here I didn't expect to see this,’ he says, revealing a sharp and deep tone.

 

Gabriel's expression softens for a moment as he is unsure what to say. He inhales, pulling me closer to him. My throat goes dry and my heart starts pumping in my chest. I remember his words well: if anyone else found out about me I am dead.
  

 

‘Please, Adam,’ he begins.

 

‘How is it possible that she can see you?’ asks Adam, looking at me. His white hair is tangled by the wind.

 

‘I was stabbed and almost died,’ I explain.

 

Gabriel gives me an angry gaze, warning me to keep my mouth shut.

 

‘This is incredible,’ says Adam, shifting his body to the side. ‘Gabriel, we have been friends since birth. I feel offended thinking that you don't trust me and are keeping this beautiful lady to yourself.’

 

I blush slightly. Gabriel’s eyes darken.

 

‘I am sorry, Adam, but I am protecting her. If anyone else found out, you know exactly what this would mean,’ says Gabriel and my stomach twists uncomfortably.
 

 

‘I’m afraid that you are right, my friend,’ says Adam.

 

He has a white coat and bare feet. He looks incredibly calm with the blond-white hair, and his eyes are shifting from Gabriel to me. I’m unable to guess what he is thinking.
 

 

‘Coming here today was foolish, but I know you too well not to notice that you were up to something. Rose is also concerned. You seem so happy.’

 

Gabriel isn't looking at him; he is staring at the waves.

 

‘For the first time in my life, I feel happy.’

 

‘Well, I can only imagine how you are feeling. You know exactly what would happen if anyone else knew about her. She will be probably allowed to live, but you, my dear friend, won’t be so lucky.’

 

‘That’s what I don’t understand. Why is it so important that no one knows about me?’ I barge into the conversation.

 

He stares at me, then his eyes move down my body. I blush again, feeling embarrassed.

 

‘After the last changeling, the council decided that we are here to help humans and we cannot let them into our world. However, the changelings mixed genes. We desired to have to some fun in our boring lives. From my childhood I remember that many fairy mothers swapped their children to give them happy human lives. It got out of control and the council stopped it forever.’

 

Gabriel seems calmer again. His expression is unreadable. I suspect that our date is over. Adam is still staring at me while I think about Rose. She is a Sprite, but also a woman, and knows that something is wrong.

 

‘What are you suggesting?’ asks Gabriel, his tone husky. I know he is uncomfortable. Adam touches his shoulder, moving closer to me. He is slightly shorter than Gabriel, but equally as handsome.
   

 

‘Just enjoy yourself. I am not here to judge, but be aware that you are playing a very dangerous game,’ he adds, almost whispering.

 

His advice is reasonable, but I can't make out if he is wishing us good luck, or if he is just pointing out how stupid we are. I won't forgive myself if anything happened to Gabriel. Both of us are silent. I don't know what to say or how to react.
 

 

‘He is right. I am stupid to come here today,’ announces Gabriel. His tone is too high.
 

 

‘Don’t be so miserable. Just enjoy it while you can. I am jealous, brother,’ says Adam and winks at me.

 

I can't help but smile.
 

 

‘I think it would be better if we go,’ says Gabriel, staring at me, his eyes full of regret. I refuse to reveal how disappointed I really am. Adam confirms what I was thinking: this relationship isn’t going to get easier for me. Adam helps me realise that maybe I should stop seeing Gabriel to avoid the pain in the future for both of us. Gabriel kisses my forehead and I know it’s our good-bye. His tone of voice changes, but his eyes aren't revealing anything. I drive home, thinking about how uncertain and complicated my life has become since the incident on the beach back in September. I get home in forty minutes. My phone rings half an hour later.
   

 

‘Hi, Mum,’ I answer. I was expecting her call.

 

‘We are just about to leave,’ says Mum. I can sense her stressed tone. I have to move my phone away from my ear because she is shouting and the noise in the background is unbearable.

 

‘Mum, please don’t scream. I can hear you fine.’

 

‘I am sorry, Ania. I am just about to get on the plane. Make sure you stay out of trouble.’

 

I roll my eyes.

 

‘Yes, don’t worry about me. Tell Grandma that I miss her. Did the police call you about the burglary?’ I ask, hoping to find out more about my missing diary.

 

‘Oh yes, they say that they caught someone last night.’

 

‘Who is it?’

 

‘I don’t know. They say that he wasn’t at the station for long because he got away,’ she continues.

 

‘What do you mean got away?’

 

‘The sergeant called me and said that they were not sure how he escaped. He just vanished. They're not sure how. The cell was locked.’

 

‘Hallo? Hallo, Ania, are you there?’ Mum starts shouting again. I stare at the phone, frozen.

 

‘I can hear you, Mum. What do you mean that he isn't there? How did they find him anyway?’ I continue to question her. My breathing is irregular and I break out in a cold sweat.

 

‘I don't know, Ania. He just called me to say that they had him. Apparently, he was caught trying to sell something illegal.’

 

‘Okay, but what about the part where you said that he escaped from the police station?’ I continue, closing my eyes and trying to calm down. The noise in the background is getting on my nerves and I can’t concentrate.

 

‘I haven't got time to talk to you right now. I have to go, but I will call you when we get there,’ she says, and I think we get disconnected because the line cuts out.

 

I fall on the bed, looking up at the ceiling. My thoughts of the memories from Oxwich Bay in Gower Peninsula are slowly dissolving. I try and
analyse
the details of the break in. Someone broke into my house and searched for something specific. It sounds absurd, but for some reason, I feel that might be exactly what happened.
 

 

As Gabriel mentioned, Sprites live in their own world and care only about people's decisions, nothing else. Maybe I should stop seeing Gabriel and avoid all the problems that we may need to face in the future. He is already risking his life just because he feels happy with me. His emotions are new to him; he is too arrogant to understand why he is feeling this way. Sometimes we need to make choices in life that make us suffer, but are for the greater good.
 

 

The rollercoaster of emotions that I experienced today has left me feeling drained. My first lecture doesn’t start until 3pm, so I decide to try and go back to bed and forget about everything that’s happened today. The romantic date I was so looking forward to with my lover was interrupted and that's the end of that story now. Adam insinuated that this whole idea was selfish and shouldn't take place, and I’m inclined to believe him.

 
 
 

14

 
 
 
 

Time flies by and then we’re into March. There are only a few weeks left before the Easter break. Despite the work I have pending from university, I am looking forward to spending some alone time in London. Mum is not going to be back until the middle of April and that means that I’ll have the house to myself.

 

I am still curious about the burglar that disappeared from the cell. There isn’t any point in talking to Mum about this because she doesn’t remember what the police told her, so I don’t press on. I decide to give up and tackle it when she is back from Russia; she is enjoying herself with Dmitry so much that she doesn't want to think about London.

 

Gabriel keeps coming back, but it isn't as often as I wish it would be. I feel lucky if I see him twice a week. It’s harder to press him to talk about the emotions that are infused inside his heart. In a few weeks’ time, we will be in London, further away from the problems and worries. He took Adam's advice about Rose more seriously and spends a lot more time with her, which drives me crazy, but I have to make a compromise.
 

 

One afternoon during my French lecture, Adam shows up. I try to concentrate on what the lecturer is saying, but it is difficult to not stare at him. I have tried not to acknowledge him. Gabriel looked busy with Rose; I noticed them near the building when I walked by. I pretended that they were the air. They were kissing. He knew that I would be passing by, but still he let her kiss him. A sharp pain is stabbing in my heart and my mind is blank, but I don't show any emotions. I walk home quickly as soon as the class ends.

 

Gabriel and Adam follow me home, and I hold my tears until I am in my room. I feel as if I can never change what has happened even if I would like to. Gabriel doesn't come to see me that night, or the night after. I haven't seen him for about a week. Richard and Amy are still playing the happy couple and are spending every opportunity together.

 

The term ends at the beginning of April and within a few days I will be on my way back to London for the Easter break. My frustration isn't dissolving but grows day by day; I feel unwanted and erratic. On the way to London, I cry, trying to wash away everything that I have seen in the last few days: Gabriel and Rose happy together. After spending four hours in heavy London traffic, I finally reach home. It stops raining as I pull up outside my house. My tears subside, but I am left with a splitting headache. It feels weird entering my own house without the scent of Russian cooking in the air; it almost feels as if I am coming back to an unknown place. The house is immersed in silence as I walk in. I switch on all the lights and hope to have a long, relaxing bath.
 

 

‘Are you okay?’ asks Gabriel, appearing in the corner of the kitchen.

 

I look at him and say harshly, ‘You’ve finally showed up, then?’

 

‘Are you upset that I have been covering my tracks?’

 

He doesn't understand what I am trying to say. His strong posture shifts while his eyes are following me. I take my bag and walk upstairs. He follows me there.

 

‘I am pissed off because you made a decision that affected me and haven't even consulted me,’ I continue, my stomach tightening.
 

 

‘I am trying to protect both of us.’ He comes closer to wrap his arms around mine. He is wearing a navy T-shirt with white linen trousers. His eyes are darker than usual.
 

 

‘Well then, stop protecting me. I hate it when you do that.’

 

‘Do what?’

 

‘Treat me as if I don’t get anything!’

 

‘There is no need for you to shout,’ he snaps, narrowing his eyes, and he shifts his weight to the right.

 

I press my lips together and walk towards Mum's bedroom, slamming the door. My breathing quickens, and I know that I have to calm down. I hide my head between my legs, wondering if he even understands what I am going through.

 

‘Don't come in. I want to be alone,’ I say.

 

He is still out in the hall. I get up and jump on the bed, staring at the wall for a minute. I lift my T-shirt and examine the scar from my stab wound. It feels strange to run my fingers along the jagged skin. I hear the knock, but I ignore it.
 

 

‘You do know that the door won’t stop me if I want to come in?’ he says through the door.

 

I sigh. ‘Go and make yourself busy, Gabriel. Leave me alone for a bit,’ I say, trying to sound calm.

 

‘I don’t understand your drama.’

 

I hear him going down the stairs. Mum's bedroom is spotless. She changed the sheets and cleared out her cabinet. I am certain that she has a whole
litre
of vodka somewhere in the room that she keeps for special occasions, though they never normally occur. After a week of hell, I have to have a drink. I know that I will not be able to sleep well, despite having Gabriel near. I get up and walk to the cupboard where she normally keeps her bills. I push aside a guilty feeling that it isn't right to be going through my mother's personal belongings, but I’m in a dire need of a drink. The drawer is unlocked and I have to go through a few piles of notebooks, but the bottle isn't there. I stand up and put my hands on my hips, wondering where else I could look. I spot a wardrobe. I bite my lip in hesitation, but then I fling open the doors.

 

After searching through the pile of clothes, I find what I was looking for and more. Next to the bottle, there is a small box; I open it without hesitation. It contains a small silver key. One of the drawers in the cupboard is locked and curiosity takes over my common sense. I walk back to the cupboard and open it. I never noticed this drawer being locked before and somehow I know that the key will fit. In the drawer, there is only one thick, plain white envelope. It's already open, so I start taking the papers out and read through them. After the first few sentences, my heart sinks and I swallow hard. The blood drains from my face.
   

 

'The adoption certificate of Ania
Petrova
, previously Ania Jones, on the 1st of May 1989'.

 

This is my own adoption certificate. My breathing slows down as I sit on the floor, trying to understand what I am looking at. I would never have expected that Mum had adopted me. ‘Jones’ sounded so odd; my real surname doesn’t suit me. My whole life is a lie that my mother has created for me. I am staring at the adoption certificate while my whole body is shaking. I scan the rest of the paper, trying to locate the name of my real parents. I take the longer birth certificate and straight away spot Patricia and Larry Jones. How could I not have known that I was adopted? The room starts to spin around, making me dizzy. Slowly, I put it all together. Everyone around me was always pointing out that I never had my parents’ features but I never actually acknowledged it – not until today.
 

 

I start checking the rest of the papers, but I can't find anything relevant. It is just a few notes from the hospital, which inform me that I was born in Bangor. Within the space of a day, I am not Russian anymore; I am actually from Wales. I put the papers back into the envelope and lock the cupboard, trying to imagine my real parents, but the new thoughts make me feel sick. My head is a complete mess. I grab my vodka and walk downstairs. Gabriel is looking at me with his arms crossed. I ignore him, take a glass out of the cupboard and splash a generous amount of vodka into it.
 

 

‘So, I’m assuming that you’re not hungry?’ he asks. The sarcasm in his tone is obvious.
   

 

‘You’re assuming right,’ I snap and close my eyes.

 

The alcohol burns my throat, but I need to dissolve my emotions even further. Gabriel moves closer and is standing by me, resting his blue eyes on my body.
 

 

‘What's wrong with you?’

 

‘Just leave me alone, will you?’ I say, giving him a sharp look while taking another sip from the glass. He is getting on my nerves.

 

‘Just remember how you will feel tomorrow,’ he says and walks off.

 

I take the bottle and go to the living room, feeling more miserable than before I started drinking. I switch the TV on and start watching some documentary. I take the bottle and drink straight through. A few minutes later, the tears are streaming down my cheeks; the vodka isn’t helping to numb the pain I feel, but I don't want to get Gabriel involved. He wouldn't understand me. I want to call my mother and tell her how angry I am, but that would be too easy for her. I need to see her face to face while shouting that I discovered her little secret that she’s has been hiding from me all these years. I look at the bottle; it’s half-empty already. The problem is that I am not drunk enough because I am still feeling like crap. I keep crying while I drink more and more until I am unable to get up. My mind is going through a cycle where I am trying to understand if I am dreaming or if this is really happening. I pass out soon enough.

 

Someone is stroking my hair. My eyes are heavy and when I finally manage to open them, a sharp pain flows through my head. My whole body is aching and I need a drink of water. After a few seconds, I realise that I am in my own bed naked and Gabriel is next to me.
 

 

‘Hi,’ I say, trying not to move, knowing that the pain won't go away.

 

‘How are you feeling right now?’

 

‘Like crap.’

 

He smiles lightly and moves closer to me.

 

‘I should let you suffer so you will never touch alcohol again,’ he says, observing my reaction. ‘But then you will complain that we don't spend enough time together. I will ease your pain so you can make love to me,’ he answers and moves his fingers to my forehead. Within seconds, the pain is fading and a few minutes later, I am able to move again.
 

 

‘Thank you,’ I say. Then I remembered what happened yesterday; the brutal reality of my life hits me. Gabriel looks at me, breathing calmly. His smoky hair is in a mess.
 

 

‘You drank the whole bottle yesterday.’

 

‘I know. I had a bad day,’ I explain, staring at the window. ‘Seeing you with Rose and then you didn't show up for a whole week …’

 

‘I’m sorry. I am learning to be considerate. I am not human.’

 

‘It's not an excuse,’ I snap, feeling angry.

 

‘Get in the shower and I’ll make you some tea,’ he says, standing up.

 

There’s no point in arguing with him, but still he upsets me. I nod and look in the mirror. I’m not sure how long I’ve been sleeping, but it is dark outside and I look terrible. I am pale and have massive dark circles under my eyes, but at least my head has stopped hurting.

 

‘Yes, of course, Your Highness,’ I say.

 

 
I underline the word ‘Highness’ as he leaves the bedroom, staring at me. His expression is once again unreadable. After a refreshing shower, I feel better, but I am still annoyed. My mind is hollow when I think about my adoption papers. The guilt fills my heart, but at the same time I am furious. Mum is just a manipulative liar, trying to control me all these years. I sit down on the sofa, wishing I could reverse everything that happened in the last twenty-four hours. I can't believe that I was so naive. I never cared about my father; he left my mother when I was little and I never remembered him, but Mum was always there. Gabriel will have to wait; I don't think I am ready to share the reality I have learnt in the past few hours with him just yet. Mum needs to explain to me why she never told me the truth. Gabriel is with me and I need to try to enjoy his company. He emerges from the kitchen and hands me a cup of hot tea. It’s green and smells strange.
 

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