Allegiance (16 page)

Read Allegiance Online

Authors: Wanda Wiltshire

BOOK: Allegiance
8.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I shifted my attention back to Leif. He was holding out his hand for the obligatory kisses and every female was either pressing close or taking her turn. I had a horrible, twisting feeling inside and didn’t know which had been the greater cause—Jack and the human girl or Leif and the faeries.

After a short while, and to a chorus of disappointed sighs, Leif withdrew his hand and said, ‘We have come to speak with Armand and Maia.’

A man came forward and all but one of the women drew back.

‘Leave us now,’ Leif said to the rest of the group, softening his words with a smile. Immediately everyone began to release their wings and fly away. One of the boys took the human girl with him. It seemed second nature—he simply lifted her into his arms and flew off with the others. She didn’t make a sound, just continued to watch Jack, clutching the boy’s shoulders and pulling herself higher so she could peer around his beating wings. Jack watched her right back.

‘Hypnotised much?’ I asked my friend.

When he could no longer see her, Jack turned to me and grinned.

‘We bring news,’ Leif said to the two remaining faeries. ‘But first I would like to introduce you to my betrothed, Marla, and our human friend Jack.’

I liked the way he said that—
our
human friend. I liked the way he included himself in the friendship, especially after what he’d put up with—what he was still putting up with, really. I smiled at him and he smiled back, warm enough to melt butter.

Maia and Armand curtsied and bowed in my direction, and made all the appropriate comments upon meeting the betrothed of the young prince. Leif eventually interrupted them and told them of my meeting with Arelle, explaining that he would be going to America in an attempt to locate their daughter. Armand thanked us both, his face alight, while Maia clung to her husband’s arm, hope sparkling in her eyes.

When we arrived back at the castle, Leif left Jack and me by the lake and went to see his father. I watched my friend as we relaxed in the sun. He smiled dreamily at the wisps of white floating across the lavender sky, knees bent and hands linked behind his head. ‘Ah, Marla, did you see her?
Ameyah.

‘I have eyes, Jack.’

‘You’re jealous,’ he said, smiling wide in my direction.

I groaned. ‘Do you have to enjoy it so much?’

He laughed softly. ‘You want me to pine for you forever?’

‘Maybe for more than a few days.’

Jack reached across and, stroking the side of my face with the backs of his fingers, quietly said, ‘Tell me there’s a point, sweetheart, and I’ll forget I ever laid eyes on her.’

I frowned and blushed all at the same time. ‘Jack…’ I started, but couldn’t continue.

After a pause he said, ‘Hmm, that’s what I thought.’

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

The next day, I returned with Leif and Jack to the home in the treetops Ameyah shared with her Fae parents. Armand answered the door, Maia standing beside him. Leif told them he was about to go to Earth to search for their daughter, but that he’d brought me and Jack to meet Ameyah so that she might learn about the human world. After telling us his daughter was down by the rock-pool with friends and offering to take us there, Armand said, ‘Highness, we—that is Maia and I—have been wondering, will our king insist upon Ameyah’s return to the human world now this discovery has been made?’

Gently, Leif said, ‘It was to happen regardless—you know this, Armand.’

A sob escaped Maia’s throat. ‘But how will we part with her? Ameyah is our daughter, born of our flesh or not.’

I watched Leif place a hand on Maia’s arm, my heart aching for her and Armand. And then a rush of cold went through me as a horrible thought occurred to me—
is this how my parents feel about my coming to Faera?

‘The king will allow you to visit her,’ Leif said, recalling my attention and prompting a private vow—as far as I could help it, I would
never
miss one of the Sundays Dad had insisted on.

‘But she will not want to go,’ Maia cried, her eyes filling with tears. ‘And why should she? Earth is a terrible place!’

Maia’s face relaxed and I knew that Leif had calmed her. Armand led her to the table and sat her down before quietly telling us, ‘I will take you to my daughter.’

Armand led us through the forest until we reached a rock-pool where a group of girls cavorted. Jack became immediately hypnotised by the sight, barely noticing when Leif left us to go in search of the Fae changeling.

Ameyah looked up at the sound of her father calling, and when she came out of the water wearing nothing but the bottom half of a bikini, I heard Jack inhale. Droplets of water sparkled on her brown skin like tiny jewels, and as I watched Jack admire her, a feeling of loss sank into me. I wondered if my feelings for Jack would ever return to friendship.

‘Have your parents told you we might have discovered your human family?’ I asked after her father had left.

‘They have,’ she answered, her eyes fixed on Jack.

‘We don’t know much about them, but we do know you have three older siblings—two sisters and a brother. They—’

‘I do not care to know,’ she interrupted, her brow creasing into a frown.

‘But King Telophy wishes us to tell you.’

‘I know what King Telophy wishes,’ she said, dragging her eyes from Jack to look at me. ‘He wishes to send me to the human world, but
I
do not wish to go.’ Her sweet little face was rebellious. This was going to be more difficult than I thought.

‘We’ve only come to talk with you, Ameyah, not take you there. And Leif thought you might like to meet another human.’

‘Well, Prince Leif is wrong,’ she said. But the way her eyes were glued to Jack again made her a liar.

‘You might like me if you got to know me,’ Jack said with his most winning smile.

‘Indeed I will
not
like you if your intention is to take me to the human world.’ She finished with a huffing noise and tipped her freckle-sprinkled nose to the sky as she crossed her arms.

Jack’s lips curved into a grin as he held his hands up in surrender. ‘Hey, that’s got
nothing
to do with me.’

‘Well then,’ she said, returning her eyes to him, ‘you may speak if you wish it, but know this, I would not leave my home for anything. I will run away before I allow the king to send me to the human world.’

Jack’s grin grew impossibly wide. ‘At least let me know when you’re leaving so I can go with you.’

I looked at him. ‘There’s no mystery about you Jack.’

‘Mystery’s overrated,’ Jack said, shooting me a grin before turning back to Ameyah. ‘So what can I tell you about my world?’

‘I do not care to know a thing, Jack. But if it pleases you to speak of it, I will listen.’

Jack told her all about life in the human world. The way he described it made it sound much more appealing than it actually was. Then again, Ameyah wouldn’t have my health issues. ‘Have I tempted you at all?’ he asked her when he’d finished.

‘Perhaps a little,’ Ameyah admitted. Then she stood and glanced in the direction of her friends before inviting us to swim with her.

By the time Leif returned to the little treehouse, shadows hung over the mountains and the sun had turned the sky every shade of orange and pink. Before he’d even opened his mouth, the expression on his face told me he’d found Claudette. He made the announcement slowly, first gathering the family around the table. Maia cried out when she heard the news, clutching Armand’s bicep. He turned into her with a sob, dropping his face to her hair. Ameyah watched on, her eyes flicking between them, expression giving nothing away. I felt sad for her. Not only would
King Telophy force her to go to Earth but she could only feel that she was about to be replaced. Leif didn’t go into details about the meeting, but later over dinner with his parents he explained that it had been a success, that while Claudette’s human parents had needed quite a bit of his soothing influence to come to terms with the situation, the girl herself was more than keen to see Faera. Afterwards as I walked with him to his room, Leif said, ‘I am taking you to meet Claudette in the morning.’

I looked up and caught his eyes. ‘How come?’

‘Would you not like to?’

I shrugged. ‘I guess.’

Leif smiled and squeezed my hand. ‘You will be glad of the meeting.’

‘Why?’ I asked as we arrived outside his bedroom.

Leif stopped and turned in the doorway. ‘She is like you, is she not? Raised in the human world?’

‘That hardly makes her like me.’

He smiled and pulled me into a hug, dropping a kiss to my lips before telling me goodnight.

‘I can’t come in?’

‘There is nothing I want more, but if you come to my room, you will come to my bed. And if you come to my bed, I will not sleep—and I need to sleep. My father will have me up again in a few hours to guard the night and in the morning I wish to leave early.’

I frowned. ‘Why so keen?’

‘You’ll see,’ he said as he nudged me out the door.

‘Hey!’

‘I will make it up to you,’ he told me with another kiss. ‘Tomorrow, if I can convince my father to spare me, we will spend the night in the human world. I have already arranged a hotel room in the event he gives his consent… I feel like celebrating.’

‘What will we celebrate?’

‘Your choice.’

‘Being together again?’

‘If you wish,’ he agreed with a smile.

I left him to sleep and went to hang out with Jack.

The room was perfect: crisp white linen, red roses and golden lighting. There were heart-shaped chocolates on the pillows and an ice bucket holding a bottle of something beside the bed. I couldn’t have any of it, but I didn’t care—I was alone with Leif and that’s all that mattered. I would’ve been just as happy in a cave. I made for the enormous bed and jumped into the middle, holding my arms wide. Leif came into them and gathered me against him. ‘They gave us the honeymoon suite,’ he said, then frowning, added, ‘I’m not sure what that means.’

‘It’s meant for newlyweds. When humans get married they take a romantic holiday together called a honeymoon.’

He chuckled as he nuzzled my neck.

‘You knew already,’ I said, letting my breath trickle into his ear.

He sighed and squeezed me closer.
I’ve missed you so much,
he told me silently as he pressed kisses to my face.
It was selfish of me to come for you now, but I could wait no longer.

I would have asked him why it was selfish, but I couldn’t form a word, not even in my head, because I was already drowning in the sensation of his hot breath in my hair and his fingers trailing sparks across my skin. We stroked and caressed and teased each other. But it didn’t take long for me to know he had no intention of allowing our physical relationship to progress any further than it had before. He put a stop to any move I made to make it so—his hands more fleet than mine.

I got annoyed with it after a while. ‘Why Leif?’ I asked as he grabbed my hand yet again and put it back around his waist.

‘You know why,’ he murmured as he kissed me in the little hollow beneath my collarbone. ‘Ah, you smell divine, what is that?’

Other books

Black Feathers by Robert J. Wiersema
The Broken String by Diane Chamberlain
Travesty by John Hawkes
The Exception by Sandi Lynn
Pay the Piper by Joan Williams
Glitter on the Web by Ginger Voight
Crazy Love by Tara Janzen
Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli
You're My Little Secret 2 by Chenell Parker