Authors: Melissa Marr
Tags: #Romance, #Juvenile Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fiction
"And say what?"
He stared at her as he answered, "Say you'll trust me. Say you'll let me in for real, finally."
She didn't answer, didn't know what to say. Sure, she'd kept things from him, but she kept things from everyone. That was just the way it was.
He sighed. Then he put on his glasses and held the pen poised over the notebook.
"Right.
Tell me what you know. What do they look like?"
"You won't be able to see them."
He paused again. "Why?"
She didn't look away this time. "They're invisible."
Seth didn't answer.
For a moment they just sat there, quietly staring at each other. Her hand stilled on Boomer as she waited, but the boa didn't move away.
Finally Seth started writing. Then he looked up. "What else?"
"Why? Why are you doing this?"
Seth shrugged, but his voice wasn't nonchalant when he answered, "Because I want you to trust me? Because I want you to stop looking so haunted?
Because I care about you?"
"Say you do go research. What if they … I don't know, hurt you? Attack you?" She knew how awful they could be
even if he didn't—
couldn't
—get it
.
"For going to the library?"
He crooked his eyebrow again.
She was still trying to get her head together, to find a line between begging him to really believe her and telling him she wasn't serious. She pushed Boomer off her onto the sofa cushion and stood up.
"You see them hurt anyone?"
"Yes," she started, but she stopped herself. She paced over to the window. Three faeries lingered outside, not doing anything, but undeniably there. Two of them were almost human-looking, but the third was as far from human as they got—too big and covered in dark tufts of fur, like a bear that walked upright. She looked away and shuddered. "Not these two but … I don't know. Faeries grope people, trip them,
pinch
them. Stupid stuff usually. Sometimes it's worse, though.
A lot worse.
You don't want to get involved."
"I
do
want to. Trust me, Ash. Please?" Half smiling then, he added, "And I don't mind being groped.
Perks for helping."
"You should. Faeries are …" She shook her head again. He
was joking
about it. "You can't see what they look like."
Without meaning to, she pictured Keenan. Blushing, she stammered, "Most of them are pretty horrible."
"Not all of them, though?" Seth asked quietly, not smiling anymore.
"Most of them"—she looked back at the three faeries outside, unwilling to look at Seth when she admitted it— "but no, not all of them."
[Faeries] could make themselves seen or not seen at will. And when they took people they took the body and soul together. —
The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries
by
W Y. Evans-Wentz (1911)
Aislinn closed her eyes as she finished describing the faeries who'd been stalking her. "They're court fey; I know that much. They move in the circle of a king or queen, have enough influence to act without consequences. They're too strong, too arrogant to be anything else." She thought about their disdain, their disregard for the fey watching them. These were the most dangerous sort of faeries: ones with power.
She shivered and added, "I just don't know what they want. There's this whole other world no one else sees. But I do. … I watch them, but they've never noticed me—not any more than they do anyone else."
"So you see others that aren't following you?"
It was such a simple question, such an obvious one. She looked at him and laughed, not because it was funny, but because it was so awful. Tears ran down her face.
He just waited, calm, unflappable, until she stopped laughing. "I guess that was a yes?"
"Yes." She wiped her cheeks. "They're real, Seth. It's not that I see things. There are faeries, creatures, almost everywhere.
Awful things.
Beautiful ones.
Some
that are
both at once. Sometimes they're horrible to each other, doing really"—she shuddered at the images she didn't want to share with him—
"bad
things, sick things."
He waited.
"This one, this Keenan, he
approached
me, made himself look like a human and tried to get me to go with him." She looked away, trying to summon the calm she relied on when the things she saw got too weird. It wasn't working.
"So what about this court thing? Could you talk to their king or whatever?" Seth turned the page.
Aislinn listened to the soft whisper of paper falling, loud in the room despite the music, despite the impossibility of hearing such a soft sound.
Since when can I hear a sheet of paper falling?
She thought about Keenan, thought about how to explain that sense of strength he exuded. He'd seemed immune to the iron downtown—a terrifying possibility; at the very least, he'd been strong enough to hold a glamour around it. Deadgirl had seemed weakened by it, but it hadn't repelled her either. "No.
Grams says
court fey are the crudest ones. I don't think I could face anything stronger even if I could reveal myself, and I can't. They can't find out that I can see them. Grams
says
they'll kill or blind us if they find out we see them."
"Suppose they're something else, Ash?" Seth was moving now, standing in front of her. "What if there's another explanation for what you saw?"
She folded her hand into a loose fist as she stared at him, feeling her fingernails dig ever so slightly into the palm of her hand. "I'd love to believe there's another answer. I've seen them since I was born.
Grams sees
them. It's real.
They're
real."
She couldn't look at him; instead she stared down at Boomer, who had twisted his entire length into a tight coil in her lap. She trailed her finger down the side of his head gently.
Seth cupped her chin and tilted her head back so she was looking at him. "There's got to be something we can do."
"Can we talk about it tomorrow? I need …" She shook her head. "I just can't deal with any more tonight."
Seth reached down and lifted Boomer. The boa didn't uncoil as Seth carried him to his terrarium and gently lowered him to the heat rock.
She didn't say anything else as Seth latched the lid to keep Boomer from wandering off. Given half a chance, Boomer found a way to slither outside if he was left home alone, and in most months the temperature out there could be fatal for him.
"Come on, I'll walk you home," Seth said.
"You don't need to."
He crooked his eyebrow and held out his hand.
"But you can." She took his hand.
Seth led her through the streets, as unaware of the fey as everyone else they passed, but just having his arm around her made it seem less awful.
They walked silently for almost a block. Then he asked, "You want to stop at Rianne's?"
"Why?" Aislinn walked a little faster as the wolf-girl who'd given chase earlier started circling predatorily.
"Her party?
The one
you
told me about?" Seth grinned, acting like they were okay, like the whole faery conversation hadn't happened.
"God, no.
That's the last thing I need." She shivered at the thought. She'd taken Seth to a couple parties with the Bishop O.C. crowd; by the second one it was pretty clear that the mixing of the two worlds was typically a bad plan.
"You need my jacket?" Seth pulled her closer, attentive as always to the slightest detail.
She shook her head no, but leaned closer to him, enjoying the excuse to be held by him.
He didn't object, but he didn't let his hands brush anywhere they shouldn't, either. He might flirt, but he never made a move that was anything other than just-friends.
"Stop at Pins and Needles with me?" he asked.
The tat shop wasn't out of the way, and she wasn't in any hurry to be away from Seth. She nodded, and then asked, "Did you finally pick something to get?"
"Not yet, but Glenn said the new guy started this week. I thought I'd see what his work looks like, what styles, you know."
She laughed. "Right, wouldn't want to get the wrong style."
Mock scowling, he tweaked a strand of her hair. "We could find one we both like. Get a matched pair."
"Sure, I'll do that—right after you meet Grams and convince her to sign a consent form."
"So, no ink for you then.
Ever."
"She's nice." The argument was an old one, but she hadn't given up yet—or made any progress.
"Nope.
Not going to risk it." He kissed her forehead. "As long as she doesn't meet me she can't look at me, and say, 'Stay away from my girl.'"
"Nothing wrong with how you look."
"Yeah?"
He smiled gently. "Would she think that?"
Aislinn thought so, but she hadn't been able to convince Seth of it.
They continued in silence until they reached the shop. The front of the tat shop was almost all windows, making it seem less intimidating to any curious ink seekers, but unlike the tattoo parlors she'd seen when they went up to Pittsburgh, this was not a glossy shop. Pins and Needles retained some of the grit of the art, not catering to the trendy crowd—not that Huntsdale had much of a trendy crowd.
The cowbell on the door clanged when they walked in. Rabbit, the owner, peeked out of one of the rooms, waved, and disappeared.
Seth went to a long coffee table against the wall that had portfolios piled on top of it. He found the new one and sat down with it. "You want to look with me?"
"Nope."
Aislinn went up to the glass case where bars, rings, and studs were laid out. That's what she wanted. She only had a single hole in each ear, but every time they came in, she considered getting a piercing. Nothing in her
face
, though, not this year:
One of the two piercers stood up behind the cabinet. "You ready for a labret yet?"
"Not till I graduate."
He shrugged and went back to cleaning the glass.
The bell clanged again. Leslie, a friend from school, walked in with a heavily inked guy, far from the sort she dated. He was beautiful: close-cropped hair, perfect features,
blue
-black eyes. He was also fey.
Aislinn froze, watching him, feeling the world tilt under her.
Too many faeries wearing human faces tonight.
Too many strong fey.
But this faery barely looked her way as he went to the back room, trailing his hands over one of the steel-framed jewelry cabinets he passed.
She couldn't look away, not yet. Most faeries didn't walk downtown; they didn't touch iron bars; and they sure as hell didn't walk around able to hold
a glamour
while touching poisonous metal. There were rules. She'd lived by those rules. There were a few exceptions—the rare strong fey—but not this many, not at the same time, and not in her safe spaces.
"Ash?"
Leslie reached her hand out. "Hey.
You all right?"
Aislinn shook her head.
Nothing is right anymore.
Nothing.
"I'm good." She looked toward the room where the faery waited. "Who's your friend?"
"Tasty, isn't he?" Leslie made a noise somewhere between a moan and a sigh. "I just met him outside."
Seth put the book down and crossed the room.
"You ready to go?" He slid a steadying arm around Aislinn's waist. "I can—"
"In a sec."
She glanced at the faery with Rabbit; their voices were barely more than a whisper. Forcing her paranoia aside, she turned her attention to Leslie. "You're not taking him to
Ri's
, are you?"
'Trial?
What, you don't think he'd be a hit?"
"He's certainly different than your usual"—she bit her lip and tried to act like everything was normal—"vie—…I mean, partners."
Leslie shot him a longing look. "Unfortunately he doesn't seem interested."
Aislinn held in the sigh of relief that Leslie wasn't going to try to pursue the faery. Life was already complicated enough.
"I wanted to see if you're coming to the party." Leslie grinned—somewhat viciously—at Seth.
"Both of you."
"No." Seth didn't elaborate. He tolerated Leslie, but tolerate was the best he could do. Most of the girls who went to Bishop O.C. weren't people he willingly hung with.