Chapter 2

3379 Words
Two Seconds later, I rush through the lake house living room to the faerie door, pulling the key from one of my pockets. DAMN, MY HAND IS BURNING. Then I’m in another dark space, and then through a door into the foyer, and finally I’m back at Gaius’s mountain home. My mountain home, seeing as nowhere else is safe for me anymore. I fled the Guild after they discovered my Griffin Ability, and they’ve been watching the homes of my family and friends ever since. I hurry upstairs to Gaius’s study—burning, burning, burning hand—and find him bent over a spider-like contraption that appears to be shooting sparkling dust from one spindly leg and ink splatters from another. “Mission number one complete,” I announce, marching across the room and managing to feel immensely pleased with myself despite the horrendous pain scorching across my hand. “Here’s the payment for the job.” I remove the wooden case and the gold flower from my pocket. “Plus a bit of gold, because little Elsie felt like making it on the spot for me. And—” I lower the translucent shield bubble onto a pile of books and allow it to pop, revealing the rosebud “—the all-important invitation.” “You got it!” Gaius exclaims, standing so quickly his chair falls over behind him. Despite my pain, a laugh escapes my lips. “I got it.” “And gold? You said she made it? And—your hand. That looks terrible.” “It’s fine, I’ll treat it in a moment. Open the invitation so we can see—” “You haven’t opened it yet?” Gaius asks as he rummages through one of his drawers and pulls out an emergency kit. “No, I had to get out of there without getting caught. I didn’t want to ruin the good reputation you and Chase have worked so hard to build among certain circles of fae.” “Ah, yes, probably a good idea.” Gaius removes a small tub of burn healing gel and hands it to me. “Here you go. Fix your hand up while I open this thing.” As Gaius clears a space on his desk for the rosebud, I scoop some gel from the tub and smear it across my hand. The relief is instant as the gel’s magic diminishes the burning to little more than a whisper of pain. With my attention fully on the invitation now, I lean over the desk and watch closely. Gaius touches a petal with one finger that shakes ever so slightly. The petals begin to unfurl. “This is it,” he breathes. “Our ticket inside the Seelie Palace.” “Well, if we can find out how to actually get there,” I remind him. “Details,” Gaius says with a wave of his hand. “We’ll figure that part out.” He squints at the gold letters that appear in the air above the flower. “Cordially invited … blah, blah, blah,” he reads. “Princess Audra’s birthday … masked ball … on the fourteenth day of … oh, goodness, that’s—” “Nine days away,” I say, my heart sinking. “Nine whole days. How is Chase supposed to last that long?” Gaius stares at the invitation, chewing on his bottom lip. “Well, this is our only option, unless you know how to get us in and out of the palace on a regular day without being caught.” “My ability—” “Might not be enough. This is the most well-guarded place in our world. There will be magical protection everywhere. The easiest way in is during an event like this. Security will still be high, of course, but not impossible for us to get past.” I grip the edge of the desk. “Fine. But if … if there’s even a hint of something happening to Chase before this party, then we have to go immediately.” “Of course. Which means we need to hurry up and find someone who knows how to get there.” “Yes.” And that’s something that someone else on the team will have to figure out, because my one and only potential contact is someone who never seems to leave the Seelie Court. I hold my rapidly healing hand out. “May I have the ring back? We need to update Chase.” And I need to hear his voice. I’ve gone a whole day without hearing it, and it feels as though a piece of myself has been missing. “Yes, of course.” Gaius removes a book from one of his shelves and opens it. From a carved space in the center of the pages, he removes the telepathy ring I’ve been using to communicate with Chase since he was imprisoned. A ring imbued with a Griffin Ability someone didn’t want. Fortunately, Chase was wearing the corresponding ring when he was captured. “I’m sorry I took it, but I didn’t want you distracted by anything today.” “I understand, but I wish you’d trusted me to simply leave the ring in my bedroom. You didn’t need to hide it from me.” “It isn’t that I didn’t trust you, Calla. I just wanted to be certain you wouldn’t take it with you.” I raise an eyebrow as Gaius places the ring, a simple silver band with a green stone, on my palm. “So you didn’t trust me.” He ruffles his already mussed up hair. “Fine. I’m sorry. It was your first mission for us and … well, it was very important.” “I’m fully aware of that, Gaius. I want to get Chase out of the Seelie Queen’s clutches just as much as you do.” “Of course, I know, I’m sorry. I promise I’ll trust you next time. Oh, you probably want your amber back too.” “You hid my amber as well?” I demand, curling my hand around the ring. “It was a potential distraction.” “It’s old and oversized and the only person I can contact is Ryn, so I definitely wasn’t planning on taking it with me. You know that.” “Just taking precautions,” Gaius says, handing me the antique piece of amber with a guilty smile. “Which I understand now were unnecessary. Won’t happen again.” I shake my head in frustration as I tap the amber’s surface. Gold writing fades into view. I tell myself I’ll look at it properly just now, after I’ve spoken to Chase, but I see the words ‘mom’ and ‘trial just finished’ and I can’t stop reading. A chill rushes across my skin. I feel faint, as if the blood has been drained all at once from my head. “The trial’s over,” I whisper, pulling my eyes from my brother’s message and looking up at Gaius. “They—they’re sending my mother to prison.” Chase, are you there? I call his name once more as I sneak into the Guild just before midnight. I’ve been trying to get hold of him since I left the mountain, but all I can hear are my own thoughts. I tell myself not to worry. He’s sleeping, that’s all. He’s fine. Well, he isn’t fine. He’s imprisoned in a dark, dirty cell with magic-blocking chains attached to his arms and legs. But he isn’t dead. He can’t be. The Seelie Queen wouldn’t keep him alive for a week only to suddenly finish him off with no fanfare. No, she’s keeping him alive for a reason, which means he’s just sleeping. You’re just sleeping, right? I whisper in my mind. I swallow, trying to rid myself of the nausea in my stomach, and walk confidently across the Guild’s great foyer. Moving around under the illusion of invisibility has become second nature to me. Still, it’s a risk to come here so late at night when no one else is around and a surveillance device—which isn’t a living being and can’t be influenced by my projections—could so easily spot me. I casually pull my hood further over my head. I may look suspicious to anyone watching me on a recording orb right now, but no one would ever suspect me of being Calla Larkenwood, the runaway Gifted faerie who supposedly killed one of her classmates before making half the Guild sick with a disease-causing Griffin Ability. I climb the stairs to Ryn’s office, but I walk straight past his closed door. I stop near the end of the corridor and lean against the wall. I lift my hand, as if examining my nails while waiting for someone or something. In reality, I’m scouring the corridor with my eyes for any sign of a surveillance bug. I flinch when the door beside me opens, but my projection is intact, and the guardian who walks out does nothing more than lock her office and leave with a bag slung over her shoulder. I examine the corridor for another few minutes. When I see no movement and hear no buzzing, I push away from the wall and walk back to Ryn’s door. I open it, slip inside, and shut the door. “They’re sending her to prison?” I say as I drop into the empty chair beside Dad and across from Ryn. “That’s absurd. She was only a child when she broke her contract and fled the Guild. What happened to them fining her and leaving it at that?” Dad, who looks sicker than I feel, shakes his head and covers his face with both hands. I turn to Ryn instead. “She did receive a fine,” he says. “For manufacturing high-strength potions without a permit. For breaking her Seer contract, the Guild has taken into account the seriousness of the vision she chose not to tell them about. They also seem to want to make an example of her so that other Seers don’t make light of their contracts, which is why she ended up with six months in prison instead of a second fine.” “Six months? Your message said two years.” “The rest is for the other charge: keeping your Griffin Ability secret. Considering the mess at the Guild recently—the murder and the dragon disease and the big display you put on when you fled—they’re taking failure to register Gifted persons very seriously. Apparently we’re supposed to be grateful they only gave her a year and a half for that one.” “But—that’s—” I struggle to put my thoughts together into a coherent sentence. “The mess at the Guild was my doing, not hers. She had no control over what I might use my ability for. And Dad didn’t register me either, but they’re not throwing him into prison.” “They’ve opened an investigation on me,” Dad says quietly. “And it isn’t just about failing to register you. It’s … well, they want to know how we kept it quiet for so long. Given the stories surrounding the departure of every school you’ve been at, they find it hard to believe that no one else knew about you.” Icy apprehension fills my veins. If Dad is under investigation, there’s no way he can continue to hide what he’s done. “They’re going to find out, aren’t they,” I whisper. “They’re going to find out about the bribes.” Dad pulls back slightly as confusion creases his brow. “How do you know about that?” “I overheard you and Ryn speaking.” I leave out the fact that this eavesdropping took place during an accidental trip into the past while I was wearing a time-traveling bangle. Dad watches me for several moments before saying, “Do you understand how serious this is?” “Yes. What are you going to do?” Dad takes a deep breath. “Well, as your mother said earlier, it’s time to face the consequences for what we’ve done.” My throat tightens as I try to hold back tears. “That’s what she said?” “Yes. And she’s right. We’ve broken the law. I, especially, have broken the law. Your mother doesn’t even know the lengths I went to in order to keep your name off the list.” “Dad, I’m so sorry I—” “I broke the law, Calla,” he says firmly. “I did that. If I have to face the consequences, then I will.” “But—” “We don’t even know yet what will happen to me. Right now, our concern should be for your mother. She’s the one being carted off to Barton Prison tomorrow.” “Tomorrow?” I gasp. “Where is she now? Can I see her?” “No, of course you can’t see her!” he says, his voice rising. “She’s in the detainment area downstairs. Is your ability going to get you past all those guards? Probably not. And then you’ll end up in the cell next to hers when you’re caught.” Dad’s lack of faith in my ability stings, but now isn’t the time to argue. Not when he’s clearly close to cracking from the pressure of Mom’s trial and the devastating news of her sentence. “I … I need some space,” Dad says, standing. “I’ll be outside in the forest.” He places a hand on my shoulder and adds, “You’ve found yourself in enough life-threatening situations recently. I just want you to stay safe now.” The door closes behind Dad and I pull my feet up onto the chair. I wrap my arms around my legs and press my face against my knees as the weight of what I’ve done to my parents becomes almost too much to bear. “This is all my fault.” “Calla …” “You know it is.” I raise my head and look at Ryn. “Dad would never have had to break the law if not for me. And Mom … well, the Guild might still have punished her for running away in the middle of her training, but it wouldn’t be this bad. It’s because of me that they’re doing this to her. I’m on the loose instead of in custody for supposedly murdering Saskia, and they’re taking out their frustration at their own failure on Mom. They can’t make me pay, so they’re making her pay.” Ryn rubs his face. He closes his eyes and slowly shakes his head. “I don’t know, Cal. You’re probably right, but there’s nothing we can do about it.” “What if …” My feet slip to the floor and I sit up a little straighter. “What if I turn myself in? Do you think that would make a difference?” “What?” Ryn’s eyelids spring open. “No! Are you crazy? Of course that wouldn’t make a difference. You’d end up in prison along with your mother. You can’t make this situation any better.” I flop back into the chair. “So we’re supposed to just let this happen? Let her go to prison for the next few years?” Ryn shrugs helplessly. “What’s the alternative? Help her escape so she can be on the run for the rest of her life? Barton Prison isn’t all that bad. Not like Velazar. Maybe it’s better if she just does the time. Maybe … I don’t know.” He rubs both hands over his face this time. “I don’t have all the answers, Calla.” I peer more closely at him. He seems more tired than I’ve seen him in a long time. “Are you okay?” He sighs. “Yes. I just … have a lot on my mind. I took the rest of last week off after Victoria was born, so yesterday was my first day back. So many things to do. My team began looking into this so-called guardian hater group straight after Zed tried to take Victoria. I told them to question the owner of Club Deviant, like you suggested.” “Oh yeah? Did they discover anything?” “They did, actually. One of my team recognized him as someone who escaped from the scene of a previous crime. They arrested him and searched his club. They found illegal potions that link him to another group we’ve been trying to take down for a while. Perhaps they’re all part of this larger guardian hater group. Anyway, none of this proves he had anything to do with the dragon disease or the plan to hurt Victoria, and of course he says he knows nothing of a faerie named Zed. But we’ve requested permission to use a truth potion, so if that request goes through, we’ll soon know more.” Ryn stifles a yawn before adding, “Oh, and we’ve had a spike in disappearances in Creepy Hollow recently. That’s not my department, of course, but I know Vi can help with her Griffin Ability. So I’ve been trying to discreetly get my hands on some of the belongings of those who’ve disappeared so Vi can attempt to find them. Amidst all my own work, of course.” He leans one elbow on the desk and blinks at me, as though trying to wake himself up. “How’s, um, Chase?” “Oh.” I automatically swivel the ring around my finger. “The situation’s still the same,” I say carefully. I told Ryn about the telepathy rings and that we know where Chase is being held prisoner, but I haven’t told him what we’re doing about it. I think it’s probably best he doesn’t know we’re attempting to break into the Seelie Palace. He might feel obligated to try and stop us. “I still haven’t heard a thing about him,” Ryn says. “Not even a whisper. I assumed there must be someone on the Council—the Head Councilor, at the very least—who knew about Draven’s capture, but maybe I was wrong. Maybe Angelica negotiated directly with the Seelie Queen for her freedom.” “She mentioned the Guild, though.” I continue twisting the telepathy ring, frowning at the desk as I remember that moment beside the Wishbone Rivers when I realized exactly what Angelica had done—traded her own son for her freedom. “Do you love him?” My hands freeze and blood rushes to light a fire across my skin. “What?” “After he was taken,” Ryn says, “you told me you care a great deal about him. I didn’t question it at the time because you were so upset, but … well, you mentioned previously that I had nothing to worry about when it came to your feelings for him, but something’s obviously changed since then.” He leans forward and watches me closely. “Don’t do that,” I say, pointing at him. “Don’t feel what I’m feeling.” “Hey.” He holds his hands up. “You know I have no control over that. Besides, the only thing I can feel is your complete mortification. It’s impossible to sense anything beyond that.” “Good. You can keep feeling mortified then.” “So … do you really feel that strongly for him?” I sit back in the chair and cross my arms. “Are you asking because you have a legitimate interest in knowing, or because you’d like to remind me that you think he’s too old for me?” “Well … he is.” I roll my eyes toward the ceiling before returning them to my brother. “Would you feel better if he were a hundred-year-old vampire? Because the rest of society seems to be okay with that.” Ryn c***s his head. “What are you talking about?” I lift one shoulder. “Haven’t a clue. Chase told me to say that if you brought up the age difference again.” “Right …” “Anyway, back to Angelica.” He sighs. “If you insist.” “I don’t understand why the Seelie Queen agreed to this bargain in the first place. I can’t see her wanting her traitorous daughter set loose into the world.” Ryn leans his elbows on the desk. “Presumably she agreed because she sees Draven as a far bigger threat. She must have decided the swap was worth it. I just wish the Council wasn’t keeping us all in the dark about it. It makes me wonder what other secrets they’re hiding.” I frown. “Such as? He gives a slight shake of his head. “I’m not sure. I thought I’d discover more after being invited onto the Council, but it seems there are secrets even within the Council. Secrets like Draven, and … whatever’s happening downstairs.” “Downstairs?” My mind flits over the various levels below ground at the Guild. “The detainment area?” “No. Some of the laboratories further down. I was following up on an assignment one day—a potion sample that needed to be tested—and I realized I don’t have access to some of the rooms down there. When I questioned it, I was given vague answers that don’t make sense to me. I’ve tried to find out more since then, but I haven’t been able to.” “So you think they’re hiding something in those labs?” “It’s possible.” He breathes out a long sigh. “You know, there’s a big part of me that wants to leave the Guild. I mean, they do a lot of good here, but not everything seems to be entirely aboveboard. I don’t know if I want to be part of it.” His words remind me of Zed’s accusations against the Guild. It’s a noble idea, but there’s so much wrong with the system. He obviously shouldn’t have gone on to plant a deadly dragon disease spell that almost brought the Guild to its knees. And he shouldn’t have tried to kill Ryn and Vi’s baby to punish them for leaving him and dozens of other Gifted fae locked in Prince Marzell’s dungeon years ago. But perhaps he was right about certain things. “Anyway,” Ryn says, standing and massaging one shoulder with his hand. “It’s late. You should get back to wherever it is you’re staying now. There’s no way you can see your mother tonight—or tomorrow—but you might be able to sneak into Barton Prison once she’s there. If you keep yourself invisible the entire time. Even then, it would be dangerous. Anyone watching surveillance recordings might see you.” “I’ll take the risk. I can’t go two whole years without seeing her. I haven’t even said goodbye.” Ryn nods, but his reply is lost in a yawn. “You should go home too,” I tell him. “You look terrible.” He gives me a half-smile. “You don’t look so great yourself.” I shrug. “I’ve been busy.” He raises both eyebrows. “I should probably ask what you’re up to these days, but I think it’s better if I don’t know.” “It’s definitely better if you don’t know.” He walks around the desk and lifts his jacket from the back of the chair Dad was sitting on as I add, “Hey, um, will you let me know if you hear any talk of a dangerous prisoner being held by the Seelie Court?” “Of course.” “Thanks.” I turn to leave, but he catches my shoulder before I open the door. “Don’t do it,” he says. “Do what?” “Whatever you’re planning to do now about your mother. Sneaking downstairs to see her, or trying to get her out. It isn’t worth you getting caught.” “I’m tired, Ryn. I barely have enough energy left to focus on the invisibility required to get me out of the Guild let alone past all the security between here and Mom’s detainment cell. And I’m not going to try and get her out. If she told Dad she’s ready to face the consequences of her actions, then … I guess I have to respect that.” Ryn’s eyes narrow. “You’re not lying to me, are you?” I look him straight in the eye and say, “No. I am not going down there tonight.”
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