Read The Boy with the Hidden Name Online
Authors: Skylar Dorset
on my whole life. They barely look up at me as I pass through
the room into the kitchen, looking for something that could
serve as breakfast.
“Are you off to school?” Aunt True calls.
“Have a nice day!” Aunt Virtue adds.
I open the refrigerator door and stare at the contents, trying
not to think about how my aunts are actually ogres who have
raised me since birth because my homicidal faerie mother
abandoned me on my father’s doorstep. Oh, and then, for
good measure, drove my father insane. We’re ignoring all of
that now. Because back before I knew any of that, my life was
so simple and straightforward, and that’s what I want back.
Unfortunately, as soon as I straighten and close the refrig-
erator, giving up on the idea of food, the sun goes out.
That is what it feels like at least. The room plunges into a
darkness as severe as night. My aunts look up, confused. I tip
my head and walk over to the window and look out. Where
the sun had just been shining on us, there are now dense,
black clouds roiling overhead.
I stare at them, because those clouds are not of this world.
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I look at my aunts, hesitate, and then say, “What— ”
My aunts have gone back to knitting, even more furiously
than before.
“You’re going to be late for school,” Aunt True says, and
that is the end of that attempt at conversation.
My aunts hate it when I ask questions. It tends to destroy
the world.
x
Kelsey is waiting for me when I open the front door. Going
to school together is part of our routine. What is not part of
our routine is the redheaded faerie standing next to her.
“Safford,” I say in surprise, because I haven’t seen him since
Ben disappeared last week and Will disbanded our little band
of revolutionaries, saying there was no point anymore.
“That’s not good,” Safford says, not taking his eyes off the
clouds overhead. All of the regular humans going about their
days on Beacon Street seem to think this is just a sudden
weather phenomenon, but Safford is from the Otherworld
and knows better.
“Where did you come from?” I ask.
Kelsey looks at me and blushes a little bit. “He just showed
up.” Kelsey and Safford have some sort of thing going on. If
you can call it a “thing” when one half is a faerie. I know from personal experience that trying to have a relationship with a
faerie is tricky at the best of times.
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“I think you’re going to need help,” Safford says into the
dark sky. “Lots and lots of help.”
Annoyed, I look up and down Beacon Street for a break in
the traffic so we can cross. “I’m not doing the prophecy any-
more. I can’t do the prophecy. We don’t have the other three
fays and we don’t have Ben and you heard what Will said.”
Finally we cross the street together.
Safford says, “I think Will’s wrong. I think this is out of
your control.”
“Safford,” I say in exasperation as we walk down Boston
Common toward Park Street, “I hate to break it to you, but
this was never
in
my control.”
“Of course it was.
Is
,” Safford replies. “You’re the fay of the autumnal equinox. It’s
your
prophecy.”
“It doesn’t feel like my prophecy,” I say. “It feels like all that happens is that I get violently pushed around by everyone
and everything when I just want to live my li— ”
The bell from the Park Street church tower suddenly flies
out of its confines, wood splintering all around it, and lands
with a heavy, dull impact only a few feet away, with one last
clang of protest that rings deep vibrations through my bones.
After a moment of stunned silence, panicked commuters
start behaving as if bells are suddenly going to fall from the
sky all over the place.
“Exhibit A,” Safford says. “They’re getting rid of the church
bells before they attack.”
“Who?” I say, even though I already know.
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“The Seelies. They can’t get into Boston. It’s protected. By
an enchantment created by a faerie who’s left,” Safford points
out frankly.
Ben. I glare at Safford, who is Ben’s cousin and therefore
probably on his side, but still. “Thanks for that reminder.”
“I’m just saying I think we need to do something.”
Commuters spill around us, desperate to get away from the
bell sinking incrementally into the Common’s concrete path-
way. On our left, Park Street Church sits silent, its ruined bell tower splintering still. Off in front of us, the church bell at
the Cathedral Church of St. Paul smashes its way through the
rooftop, provoking more panic as it arcs over the Common
and lands in the middle of a group of fleeing commuters.
None of them seem hurt, but that’s just a bit of luck. These
bells could easily have killed people. And there are churches
positioned like that all over Boston, clustered close together,
all within throwing distance of each other. Church bells are
going to be flying into crowds on every block of this city.
And I can’t deny it anymore. Apparently trying to be
normal means turning Boston into some kind of dangerous
war zone. “We need to find Will,” I say.
x
The T station is chaos. The subways are clogged in all direc-
tions, and compounding the problem, it seems like everyone
on Boston Common has decided to take shelter in the station.
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We give up before we even reach the turnstiles, turning back
and struggling against the crowd, up onto the Common.
“What now?” asks Kelsey. “The ferry?”
“We don’t have a choice,” I agree.
“Why can’t he have a cell phone?” Kelsey complains.
“Supernatural creatures could really be a lot easier to get
along with.”
I start to respond but then hear someone calling my name,
not really with intent but firmly enough that it slices through
the chaos all around us. We all stop walking and look around,
and it’s Will, an absent- minded professor type with graying
brown hair parting the crowd around us.
When he gets closer, I realize that he looks furious. “What
are you doing out in this?” he snaps.
“We were going to look for
you
,” I snap back. I gesture to the nearest church bell on the Common. “Look— ”
“Yes, yes,” he cuts me off, “and the sun has gone out. Both
not- good things, but we can’t stand out here talking about
them, since who knows what’s coming next. We’re going to
get inside, and you’re going to get your sweatshirt.”
I hate being ordered around like this. “No, I’m not. What
does my sweatshirt have to do with any of this?”
“You and I are going to get this prophecy back on track,”
Will announces grimly.
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M y aunts are annoyed to see Will. When we get there,
they have every light in the house blazing in an
attempt to fend off the unnatural darkness of the day.
“Oh, no,” Aunt Virtue complains. “What now?”
“We need to get the prophecy back on track,” Will says.
This is an abrupt turnaround from the despairing and
depressed Will who said that Ben had destroyed the proph-
ecy when he left.
“I thought you said we couldn’t after Ben left,” I point out.
Honestly, I just thought Ben was fulfilling a different proph-
ecy, one my mother had taunted me with.
Benedict
Le
Fay
will
betray
you. And then he will die.
But Will keeps insist-ing it’s not actually part of the prophecy. I don’t know what
to believe anymore. Prophecies are so tricky, so hard to pin
down, that as far as I’m concerned, we might as well not
have them.
“I’m still not entirely sure we can,” Will admits. “But
take a look outside, would you? The
sun
has gone out. And the church bells are falling out of the towers, as far away as
Lexington and Concord. We have to do
something
.”
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“I don’t get it,” I say. “The Seelies love light. Why would
they put out the sun?”
“The Seelies love
their
light,” notes Will grimly. “Can’t have the Thisworld sun competing with their Otherworld light.
Got to get rid of the Thisworld sun first.”
“The Seelies can’t get into Boston though,” Aunt True says,
wringing her hands. “Aren’t you protecting Boston? Don’t
you have it locked from them?”
“The Seelies have been picking at the lock for a while now,”
Will says. “They’re going to get in, sooner or later. Especially without a Le Fay enchantment to add to the protections. Our
only chance is to get out now, while we can, and find the
other three fays.”
He says it like it’s so easy. “How are we supposed to do that?
I wouldn’t know where to even
start
looking,” I point out.
Will goes to answer, but Aunt Virtue cuts him off. “You
mean to tell us that, after all this time, that foolish boy
Benedict suddenly leaves and all of Boston is going to fall?”
“Boston was always living on borrowed time,” Will says
harshly. “We built it to be ready for battle, because we knew
that sooner or later, the battle would come. You’ve just for-
gotten that. Well, the battle is here.” Will gestures toward
me. “She triggered it. It’s coming. There’s nothing we can
do to stop it now. We have to take a stand, and we have
to fight.”
There’s a beat. Kelsey says, “Let’s get out of Boston then.”
“No, you don’t understand because you’re
human
,” Will
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informs her scathingly. “Boston is the
safest
place we can be.
Good luck with the rest of it.”
“Kelsey’s human,” I say. “Won’t she be fine? The Seelies,
they want me, they want us, they want— ”
“They want everything. You’ve met them. You’ve spent time
with them. The Seelies have always been in the Otherworld
because we kept them there. If you start to blur the lines
between the worlds, they’ll be everywhere. Fresh blood for
them to feed off. They need fresh blood, you know. It used to
be you could throw them a few changelings here and there.
Younger blood, faerie or human, it didn’t matter. But they
need the youth, the vibrancy. They feed off of it. And the
most alive creatures in either world are humans— they live
everything so
intensely
. So no. The humans won’t be safe. Not if we don’t hold the line in Boston.”
“And we can’t hold the line in Boston without Ben,”
I conclude.
“Or the other three fays,” says Will. “Look, I can’t read the
prophecy anymore. It’s a mess; it’s too in flux. You can’t pre-
dict the events that you’re already
living
. All I can do is guess.
We needed the other three fays. Benedict was supposed to
help us find them. This is why you can never trust a faerie.”
“We don’t have Ben anymore,” I say practically. “So what
can we do without him? What does the book say?”
“Nothing useful,” grumbles Will.
“Well, the Witch and Ward Society have been stalking me
to get it back, so it must say
something
.”
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“Yes. It says that the key to all of this is Benedict’s mother.
So now we know.”
“Then give the book back,” Kelsey tells him. “It’s getting
kind of annoying having little men popping up everywhere.”
“I’m not giving the book back,” says Will. “It was mine to
begin with. Lord Dexter left it to me. I was only letting them
borrow
it.”
“I don’t want to get into whatever happened centuries ago
with this book,” I cut in. “I want to know how we get the sun
to come back out. And how we can find the other three fays
without Ben.”
“We can’t,” Aunt Virtue says. “We should just forget about
the prophecy and— ”
“We can’t forget about the prophecy. There is no status quo
anymore, Virtue. Don’t you see? We can’t just wait for the
next opportunity to come around to save the Otherworld.
We need to do it
now
,” says Will.
There’s a moment of silence. I don’t say anything because
part of me feels guilty that I was willing to ever drop the
ball on the prophecy. It was like I’d forgotten how terrible
the Seelies are, forgotten my responsibility to a world I just
learned existed but is depending on me to save it. I have no
idea how to do it, and I doubt that I’ll be successful, but I
surely have to
try
.
“If Ben’s mother is the key to finding the fays,” Kelsey says