Now it’s time to choose a side.
When the Unified Church in Rome is destroyed by rogue sorcerers, tensions explode. Alex Blackwood will do whatever it takes to prevent a war between the humans, fae, and Earth paranaturals--even turn herself over to the PTF. But when a man she thought long dead walks back into her life at the head of a sorcerer army, surrender is no longer an option.
With all the world watching, and half hoping she fails, Alex and her friends scramble to find a peace that won’t cost them everything.
Chapter 1
I TOOK A BITE of buttered toast and
watched Cari, the youngest of the children we’d rescued from Shedraziel’s
prison, push scrambled eggs around her plate with a plastic fork. She huffed
out a breath that fluttered her sleep-matted, wheat-blond hair. "My tummy
feels funny.”
"Take a
few more bites,” prompted Emma, my friend and co-conspirator who’d helped
save the kids. She set her hand on the little girl’s back and gave her a warm
smile. "We’ve got a long time till lunch. You don’t want to get hungry in
between.”
My heart
ached as I watched the four-year-old load her fork and shove it in her mouth.
Emma wasn’t wrong about the girl needing to eat, but eggs weren’t going to
solve the funny feeling Cari described. We’d saved a total of eleven children
from Shedraziel’s realm and erased the memories of their time there, but the
physical effects weren’t so easily overcome.
Behind Emma and Cari, children ranging from six to sixteen
lounged among pillows and blankets in front of the cabin’s large, stone
fireplace. All were battered, underfed, and hopelessly addicted to goblin
fruit—the effects of which were just starting to show. Three had thrown up that
morning. Half the kids had fevers. I could only hope my fae grandfather, Bael,
sent the medicine he’d promised before their symptoms became more severe.
Long,
cool fingers twined with mine under the table. James smiled at me, though the
expression failed to crinkle the skin at the corners of his pale-blue eyes.
They’ll be all right. His voice echoed through our telepathic link—a side effect
of sharing a piece of his vampire soul to save my life that had grown stronger
since I’d given James my "true” fae name. His presence in my mind was
simultaneously comforting and unsettling.
I hope so.
Cari took three more bites and
announced she was done, then climbed off the bench to join the other children
in front of the fire.
Emma pushed a wavy strand of teal-dyed
hair back from her eyes and shook her head, causing her many piercings to flash
and jingle. "All the kids are complaining about aches and pains. May says her
stomach’s been cramped all morning.”
We all looked at Emma’s little sister,
curled up in an overstuffed chair with faded floral upholstery. She wore the
body of a girl in her mid-to late teens, but she’d been eleven less than a week
ago—before being trapped in the altered time of Shedraziel’s prison. She had
the same Japanese-Hawaiian features as Emma, but where Emma’s body was all soft
curves, May had a willowy, stretched-out appearance marked by hard angles and
protruding bones. She stared into space, her bandaged fingers tapping out a
rhythm on the armrest.
"The treatment will be here soon,” I
said with more confidence than I felt. "In the meantime, just make them as
comfortable as you can.”
Emma’s deep, brown gaze swung back to
me. "That makes it sound like you won’t be here.”
I shifted in my seat. I would have
liked nothing better than to hole up in the little cabin with Emma and James
until the kids were recovered and could be returned to their families. Even the
single morning of near normal interactions as the kids woke up and ate breakfast
had been a welcome break from the chaos of my life. But I had other
obligations.
My recorded confession about being a
fae halfer who could handle iron without the side effect of burning to death
had stunned the human community, though not as much as the footage of my friend
Sophie shifting into a werewolf and using my leg as a chew toy. Now the world
was being torn apart. Lines were being drawn, sides chosen. Law-abiding members
of the paranatural community, like Emma’s practitioner teacher Luke, were being
rounded up and sent to detention centers. As were suspected paranatural
sympathizers, like my very human, very pregnant friend Maggie.
Even with the PTF’s seeming acceptance
that werewolves were a form of local paranatural—unlike the fae who came from different
realms—an anti-fae fervor was sweeping the world. And the questions raised by
my confession weren’t helping.
"I have to clean up the mess my
confession caused, especially now that Shedraziel’s free. I need to do what I
can to avert another war.” I hugged myself, my own breakfast suddenly feeling
like a nest of insects crawling around my gut. "I’m turning myself in to the
Paranatural Task Force.”
Emma’s jaw dropped. Her eyes went wide.
James stilled. No breath swelled his
chest. I wouldn’t have been surprised to find his pulse absent for the space of
time it took my words to settle over him. A trickle of silver swirled into the
blue of his eyes. Then he blinked, and sucked in a long, deep breath.
"You’ve got to be kidding,” Emma
blurted.
Several kids looked our way.
She lowered her voice. "You saved these
kids from Shedraziel. How can you just abandon them?”
"So long as the PTF is hunting me,
you’re all safer without me around. These kids have been through enough. The
last thing they need is to get scooped up by the PTF and interrogated until
they die of an addiction the humans won’t understand or be able to treat. We
have to keep them hidden until the goblin fruit is out of their systems, but
that could take weeks if not months. Meanwhile, the humans and fae are all
gearing up for a war both sides seem to think is inevitable, and paranaturals
like the practitioners and werewolves are being hunted and caged because no
one’s sure where their loyalties lie.”
Her shoulders slumped. "I’m starting to
think war is inevitable, too. And, speaking as a practitioner, I’m not
sure where my loyalties lie right now. I feel like I belong with humans, but
the humans want to lump me with the fae.”
"The problem is a lack of
communication. We’ve got three plus groups that don’t understand each other.
But Director Harris, for all that she’s been a serious pain in my ass, seems
like a reasonable woman. If I can talk to her, convince her my immunity to iron
is just a genetic fluke and not some fae countermeasure in preparation for an
upcoming conflict with the humans, maybe I can get the PTF to stand down from
this red alert they’ve been on since that video hit the internet. At the very
least, I can shed some light on the werewolves... make her
realize hunting them like animals will only make matters worse.”
Emma opened her mouth, but before she
could speak, a shout went up among the kids.
Cari was kneeling on the hardwood
floor, whimpering. The eggs we’d insisted she eat were splattered in front of
her. The pungent, sickly-sweet smell of vomit wafted through the small cabin...
again.
I started to rise, but Emma lifted a
hand. "I’ve got this.” She cut her eyes to James, then back to me. "You guys
finish talking.”
She waded through the wall of children
standing in a circle around Cari. Emma wasn’t much taller than the oldest kids,
but even the relatively subdued outfit of her faded jeans and pale-blue T-shirt
with a series of yellow emoji faces across her chest stood out like a beacon in
the crowd of oversized green tunics and leather pants provided to the kids by
Bael’s guards. They looked like a troupe of child actors from a Robin Hood
play.
Carefully avoiding the mess on the
floor, Emma scooped Cari up and carried her into the bathroom. May grabbed a
bottle of cleaner and a roll of paper towels from under the sink.
I shifted my attention to James’s
profile. His long, jet-black hair fell over his shoulders, unbound. I reached
out and slid my fingers through the silky strands. "You’re being awfully
quiet.”
He continued to watch the children, his
eyes half-lidded, his lips pursed. "I finally have you back by my side, and now
you’d have me watch you leave again?”
I closed my eyes, but I couldn’t hide
from the hurt and frustration coming through our connection.
"It’s not as if I want to go.”
"Then don’t.”
His words rattled me, but he hadn’t
drawn on the power of my true name. His plea was just that—something I could
heed or ignore as I chose. James had only issued one command since learning my
true name, and it had saved my life. He’d given his word not to use the strange
power of the fae name I now carried against me, but I couldn’t silence the
niggling voice that insisted I’d made a mistake, that I’d regret giving anyone,
even James, the means to control me.
"The PTF is looking for someone to
lynch right now,” he said. "Handing yourself over to those fools is almost as
bad as throwing yourself on the mercy of Purity.”
I flinched. I’d been in the hands of
Purity members before—zealots who believed all magic should be eradicated. I’d
barely survived. One of my friends hadn’t. James really knew how to hit where
it hurt.
"The humans, fae, and paranaturals are
all at each other’s throats because they’re afraid of one another,” I said. "As
someone with a vested interest in all three groups—” I took a deep breath. I’d
only just discovered I had practitioner blood mixed with my already confused
DNA, and I hadn’t had time to fully come to terms with it yet. "—maybe I can
act as a... a bridge, an intermediary.”
"What makes you think you’ll even get
to speak with Harris?” he continued. "Or that she’ll be willing to listen?”
"Harris will want to talk to me, to
interrogate me if nothing else. But I’ve also got an ace in the hole that
ensures she’ll want to hear what I have to say.”
He quirked an eyebrow.
"Bael.” The name dropped like a bomb.
"The PTF doesn’t have a direct line to any of the fae lords. I do. If Harris
wants to avoid a full-out conflict, I’m her best chance at negotiating.”
"What if she doesn’t want to avoid a
war?”
"Then we’re already screwed. But I
can’t believe that’s true.”
His pale-blue eyes stared into me,
through me. He held my name. I had no secrets from him. I let him see my fear
and uncertainty, but also my determination. It was my fault the PTF was
freaking out about iron-resistant fae. It was my fault Shedraziel, the
psychotic fae general, was out of prison and preparing an army. It was my fault
the werewolves were targeted, their secret exposed. I’d made a mess. I needed
to do what I could to clean it up before any given side reached a breaking
point and the conflict we all feared was coming couldn’t be stopped. Right now,
there was still a chance.
I have to try. I pushed the thought through our link.
Anger and grief mixed with pride and
love flowed back.
For one terrifying moment, I worried he
might try to compel me despite his promise—to use the power of the true name
I’d given him and command me to stay, to keep me safe despite my wishes.
Then he cupped my face in his hands and
pressed his lips gently against mine. "My beautiful, brave, reckless love...
you will be the death of me.”
Resignation radiated through our
connection. He wasn’t happy—not by a long shot—but he wouldn’t try to stop me
from doing what I felt I must.
The tension binding my muscles slowly
released. I reached in my pocket and pulled out the fist-sized glass marble
given to me by Rhoana, the captain of Bael’s guards. "Keep this with you.
Rhoana, or whoever she sends with the kids’ medicine, will use it to find you.”
He lowered his hands and I dropped the
ball on his palm. The lines around his eyes grew tighter. He looked over the
table to the gathered children. May was still scrubbing the floor. The others
were sitting or lying on the sparse furniture. Many were pale and glassy-eyed.
Some hugged themselves as though cold.
James’s frown grew more pronounced. "I
might prefer facing Purity zealots and PTF troops.”
I started to smile, thinking his words
a joke, but the sadness in his heart froze me. James had been alive for a long,
long time. He’d had lovers... and he’d had children. Facing
an armed enemy was easy compared to watching a bunch of kids wasting away when
you couldn’t do a damn thing to stop it.
"Rhoana will send the treatment soon,”
I said again, though my words came out choked. "In the meantime, Emma seems
capable of taking care of them. But she can’t protect them if they’re
discovered. Not alone.” I waited until his gaze locked with mine. "Promise me
you’ll protect them.”
Silver danced in his eyes like
whitecaps on a pale ocean, showing the depth of his turmoil, but when he spoke,
they settled to the color of pure glacial ice. "You have my word.”
Part of me felt like a coward for
dumping the kids on Emma and James, but I was useless with children anyway.
This way, the kids would be taken care of, and maybe I could prevent a war.
That was for the good of everybody, right?
I swung my legs over the bench seat and
stood up. "Time to arrange my ride.”
MORGAN
SIPPED black coffee from a chipped green mug in the shade of the cabin’s front
porch. The rusty chains of the bench swing she sat on creaked as she pushed
herself back and forth with one foot, the other tucked beneath her. Her
ash-gray complexion, long, dark hair, and Victorian Gothic blouse made her look
like the subject of an old photograph, but her tight leather pants, tall boots,
and black trench coat ruined the effect.
I pulled the blanket I’d snagged on my
way out the door tighter around my shoulders and watched my breath steam in the
chill air. We’d all slept well past dawn, but the pale sunlight couldn’t
dissipate the cold. Beyond the porch, patchy snow covered the ground, broken by
muddy trails that led between a half dozen cabins like our own. One housed the
property manager from whom James had rented the cabin. The rest were,
presumably, full of vacationers looking for a bit of seclusion. Hopefully none
of our neighbors were the type to say hello.
"Mind if I join you?” I nodded to the
space next to Morgan on the swing.
She lowered her tucked leg and shifted
to make room.
"Was our little escapade enough to ease
your boredom?” I kept my voice light, my face forward, but I studied her out of
the corner of my eye.
"You tell a good story,” she said. "I
especially liked the part about Bael showing up to rescue you only to find you’d
gotten the upper hand on Shedraziel.” She took a drink. "I would have liked to
see that for myself.”
I nodded. Morgan was a high-ranking fae
from the Shadow Realm. As such, she couldn’t just walk willy-nilly into
Enchantment with us. She’d had to remain behind in the mortal realm while I
faced off against Shedraziel—just like James, blocked as he was from crossing
realms by the demon twined in his soul.
She took another sip of coffee. "What’s
next?”
I rocked the swing back, eliciting
another loud squeak. "James and Emma are going to stay with the kids, hopefully
treat their addiction. Then we’ll start contacting their families.”
"And you?” She quirked an eyebrow. "I
realize I may look young to you, but I’m two hundred and fifty years old. An
adolescent slumber party is not my idea of a good time.”
"You don’t want to come where I’m
going.”
She straightened, lowering her mug. "Do
tell.”
I smiled. Like many of the court fae
I’d met, Morgan seemed desperate for entertainment, and she was willing to
trade services to get it. "Will you give me a ride?”
She pursed her lips. "Depends. Do I get
to see the action this time?”
I shrugged. "I’ll be staying in the
mortal realm, if that’s what you mean.”
"Where do you need to go?”
"Back to Missouri, near the gas station
we visited on our way east.” With any luck, there’d be a PTF presence, thanks
to my previous phone call, and finding me there would stop them looking as far
away as Ohio for my friends.
"And what will you be doing there?”
"Will you take me?”
"One trip? There and back?”
"One trip,” I agreed. Though I wouldn’t
need the return.
She lifted her chin. "Deal. What are
you going to do in Missouri?”
"Turn myself over to the PTF. I’m going
to try to avert the war Bael thinks is inevitable between the humans and fae.”
She perked up. "Now that sounds
like an interesting diversion.”
I frowned. "This isn’t a game. As an
unregistered, full-blooded fae, in the current political climate, you’d
probably be executed if the PTF got their hands on you.”
She snorted. "I’d like to see them
try.”
"I wouldn’t,” I said. "The point of
this mission is to avoid bloodshed.”
"And if you can’t?”
I sighed. "Then I guess I’ll have a
front-row seat for the start of the next Faerie War.”
She set her mug on the ground, folded
her hands behind her neck, and leaned back. "Battles are fun—I love a good
skirmish—but all-out wars?” She shook her head. "They’re not as exciting as you
might think.”
I raised an eyebrow. "What’s the
difference?”
"A bar fight, a riot, a raid, those are
fast and passionate. War though... war is cold, calculated.
When there’s a war, everything becomes about that war. I prefer to observe the
full spectrum of mortal behavior. Drama, humor, angst, action, romance.” She
put her arms down and twisted toward me. "Imagine you’re in the mood for a
light romantic comedy, but the only movies you can find are dramas.”
It was weird to think of human behavior
in terms of browsing movie selections, but I could kind of see where she was
coming from. And any fae against the war, for whatever reason, was a win in my
book.
"Will you help me negotiate a new peace
treaty? I can get to Bael and the Shifter Lord—I’ve dealt with them before—but
someone with the ear of the Shadow Lord would certainly help. The more factions
we can bring to the table, the better our chances.”
"Long, boring conversations aren’t
exactly my bailiwick,” she said. "But if you get the mortals and Enchantment to
a table, I’ll call my brother. He handles most of Shadow’s diplomacy.”
Morgan’s twin brother, Galen, was the
Shadow Lord’s heir, and we were on decent terms since I’d saved him from a
vampire dungeon not long ago. Too bad I’d already called in the marker that had
earned me.
"In the meantime, will you stay with
James and Emma? They could use a fast escape if the authorities discover them,
and nothing’s faster than the shadow roads.”
"I’m not a babysitter, and I’m not
taking a bunch of snot-nosed bedwetters onto the shadow roads. It was bad
enough dragging them through one at a time. Together...” She
shuddered and held up a single finger. "One kid loses focus and the whole lot
are ghosts. I don’t need that kind of karma.”
My heart sank. "Then what will you do
after you drop me off? Do you have a number I can call to reach you? A magic
hankie I can summon you with?”
"Maybe I’ll head down to New Orleans.
Carnival season should be in full swing right now.” She smiled at me. "I’ll
keep an eye on the news. If it looks like you’ve got a shot at peace, I’ll call
my brother.” She shrugged. "Though, more likely, I’ll see a thirty-second
report on your arrest and you’ll be sitting in a PTF cell while your world
burns. I intend to get what enjoyment I can from this realm before that
happens.”