Read The Boy with the Hidden Name Online
Authors: Skylar Dorset
just so I could have you name him.” Ben opens his eyes and
looks at me. “I’m sorry, you know,” he says. His eyes are dark
and heavy and sad. “For leaving you on the Common that
day. I’m just…sorry. You’ve always taken me by such surprise,
and I’ve always behaved so poorly in response.”
I hold my breath, lick my lips, and say, “Ben.” Then I don’t
know what else to say.
“I really am so sorry, Selkie,” he says. “For everything.”
“Don’t talk like it’s over,” I tell him, because I realize sud-
denly what he’s doing. “Don’t tell me good- bye.”
“I don’t know what else to do,” he says, his voice urgent.
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He sits up and lifts his free hand. He pushes my hair behind
my ear and leaves his hand on my cheek in a caress, and I am
furious that he would do this
now
.
“We have to beat them. We have to win.”
Ben shakes his head a little bit and closes his eyes.
“Ben. Listen to me.” I lean over him a bit more, getting
myself closer to him, as if with proximity I can convince him
of what I’m saying, even though his eyes aren’t even open.
“How can we fight? We don’t know their names, so we can’t
name them, so tell me what else we can do.”
“I don’t know,” Ben groans. “We don’t know the right words.”
“What does that mean?” I demand.
“There’s power. In words. If we could find the right ones,
the right combination. That’s why the Seelies don’t write
things down— they don’t want to capture the power in the
words. If we could find the right words, the right story to tell, then maybe…But the fourth fay must be the key, because
otherwise I’ve no idea what…” Ben opens his eyes, realizes
for the first time exactly how close to him I am.
“The right story to tell,” I echo him. “We need to rewrite
the story.”
“I guess,” he says, “that would be one way of putting it.”
“It’s what Merrow said her mother said to do. Rewrite the
story. It’s what you’re saying to do too. Find the right story.”
“Words have power. You know that. It’s why the Seelies hate
to write them down. But the right story involved four fays,
and I don’t know what you’re going to do without them.”
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And then Park Street Church starts chiming the hour, the
grandfather clock in the house echoing it.
One, two, three
, go the chimes, and Merrow, Trow, Safford, and Kelsey all leave off talking to the pedestrians and instinctively hurry back toward where Ben and I are sitting on the
steps of the house.
Four, five, six
, go the chimes, and Ben draws his hand out of mine and stands warily. I follow suit.
Seven, eight, nine
, go the chimes, and we are all looking around us, waiting for something to happen.
Ten, eleven, twelve
.
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T here is a sharp, resounding crack, and Seelies tumble
headlong from the sky over the Common. On the side-
walk, people have stopped to look. The cars have slowed to
a crawl, as their drivers are clearly gaping at the supernatural hole that has opened up over their heads.
“They need to keep moving,” Ben says. “Why don’t they
keep moving?”
“Because do you
see
that?” says Trow, pointing at the hole in the sky.
“That’s exactly why they should keep moving.
Humans
.”
Ben takes a step forward, as if to prosaically direct the traffic away from the Seelies, just as a howling noise starts up.
“What’s that?” Kelsey asks.
“Wind,” answers Ben, as if there can be nothing worse
than that.
It’s frequently windy in Boston, so I don’t know what to
make of that.
Ben shouts at everyone around us, “Run! Run for your lives!”
The people on the sidewalk look at him in curious
puzzlement.
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And then the wind slams into us. It’s so strong that for
a moment, I think an actual enormous hand has reached
and slapped me backward, up against the front door, hold-
ing me in place. But it’s just the wind, so forceful that I can
barely breathe.
It ends just as suddenly as it started, and I flop unceremoni-
ously to the top step of the stoop without the wind there to
hold me up. There is a moment of complete silence, because
none of us had been able to get up enough breath to scream or
utter any noise at all. And then noise rushes on— the people
on the street screaming and shouting, children wailing.
I stagger to my feet and take stock of everyone else.
Breathless but basically okay. My head is buzzing a little bit
from where I knocked it hard against the wall, but I can push
through that.
“Everyone okay?” asks Trow, looking around at us, and I
have this thought about him being a natural caretaker.
Ben has recovered. “Go!” he is shouting at the panicked
people in the street. “Get out! Move!” And then he turns
back to us and says hastily, “Get in the house. It’s safest here.
Don’t move.” And then he leaps lightly down into the street,
toward the Seelies assembling on the Common.
Like hell I’m going in the house while he runs out into
battle. Traffic has thronged around a car accident, and people
are abandoning their cars. I don’t see the Seelies anymore,
which is terrifying to me. Weren’t they just tumbling out of
the sky? I can’t even hear any bells chiming. Did they just
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blow a wind and leave? It seems unlikely, but I don’t know
what else to think.
“Go, go, go!” Ben is shouting at people as he darts among
the cars, opening doors and pulling people out of them.
Everyone looks shocked, like they don’t know what to
make of him, and I don’t blame them. But I understand what
he’s trying to do. Wherever the Seelies are, they haven’t gone
forever. They’re going to come back. All they’ve done so far
is blow a little wind, but I am sure they can do much worse.
So I run out into the street, following his lead, urging
people along, off the street. “Where are we sending them to?”
I shout to Ben.
“What are you doing out here?” he snaps at me, and then
he is off, trying to turn some cars around that have joined
the melee.
“Ben said the house was safest,” Kelsey says by my side.
“Can we put a bunch of them in the house with us— ”
There is a flash of white light so bright that it blinds us. The screams which had been dying down are renewed, except that
now no one can see, so people are stumbling around, knock-
ing me this way and that. And when the light dies down, the
howling starts again, from far away.
Wind
, I think and dive for the nearest car, ducking down behind it. But then the street underneath me starts shaking. I
look down at it in shock. The people around me actually fall
quiet. We are all looking down at the pavement underneath
us as it starts to crack and buckle.
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I look up at Ben, who is staring off down Beacon Street,
toward the Public Garden. I follow his gaze, and what I see
doesn’t make any sense. I blink, trying to figure it out, but it looks like…a wave. A wave of…concrete, rising up and then
over the buildings and trees, cars gathering in front of it like foam would in water. That can’t be possible. But it seems as
if all of Boston is turning into an ocean of movement right
in front of us.
“Get off the street!” Ben shouts, and then he reaches for
me. I see him do it, almost as if in slow motion. I see him
lean to grab me, and then the street underneath me jumps,
flinging me off like I’m nothing but a ragdoll.
There is a moment as I’m flying through the air when every-
thing seems silent and still. And then I land with a thud, with
a crack in my ear that I imagine is my own skull. I try to
pick myself up, but I put weight on my arm when I do it
and it gives way with blinding pain.
Broken
, I think. It seems that way.
I try sitting up again, more carefully this time, and wait
for a nauseous moment of dizzying pain to pass. I’m on the
Common. From the street, there is still screaming and shout-
ing, although there is less, and I think about what that might
mean, of the people who must already have died. The con-
crete and cars are still going this way and that, tossed in a
tempest, and I can see people’s bodies flying through the air,
the way mine did. A woman in jeans and Uggs and a black
pea coat lands not far from me with an unpleasant crunch.
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Blood spreads out underneath her onto the dead grass, and
she doesn’t move again. There is a little girl crying nearby,
hands pressed around blood pouring out of her thigh.
I should get to her, I think. Although what am I going to
do? How am I going to help? I feel powerless, and I wonder
where Ben is. Or Trow. Trow has healing powers, right? He
could heal my broken arm, and then maybe he could also do
something for these poor people.
And then I think of the rags in my pocket, taken from the
Urisks.
Tourniquets
, I think, and get up and struggle over to the little girl. Someone else has stopped to help, which
is good, because I still have a broken arm to deal with and
can’t die.
“She needs a tourniquet,” I gasp and thrust the fabric at
the man.
He looks panicked but also like he understands, taking the
proffered fabric and getting to work.
“What’s your name?” I ask the little girl.
“Hannah,” she manages.
“
Hannah
,” I say gently, infusing it with all of the warm
intent that I can.
And Hannah stops sobbing, her face lightening. She actu-
ally almost smiles. “That feels better,” she tells the man still tying the tourniquet, who looks up at her, surprised.
I stand, pleased that I was able to make it better for her, and
look around, getting my bearings, trying to find someone
else who I might still be able to help.
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As I am thinking it, just like that, a Seelie appears in front
of me. And smiles. “Selkie,” this Seelie says, and the pain
is like a vice around my brain. I find myself falling back to
the ground, writhing with pain, and those moans of agony I
hear, those are mine.
When the world stops swirling Technicolor with pain, I
pant for breath, lying on my back, staring up at the Seelie over me. He smiles, one of those anti- smiles that they’re so expert
in, and I brace myself, wondering if he knows enough of my
name to name me, if this is the end, what it will feel like—
A man suddenly throws himself onto the Seelie, knocking
him to the ground, and once he has him pinned, he pulls out
a sword and slices it clean through the Seelie’s neck, severing
his head. I cry out in surprise, because I can’t help it, but then the Seelie’s head reattaches and he smiles his anti- smile again.
The goblin— I can only assume it is a goblin— starts just
hacking away at the Seelie, not that it seems to matter,
because the Seelie just keeps fixing itself. But at least he’s distracted. This is my opportunity, I know, as they grapple with
each other, but in my haste, I jostle my arm enough that pain
blossoms through me anew.
When I get to my feet, I can see that the Common is dotted
over with skirmishes, Seelies clashing with goblins. The gob-
lins are all flashing swords that glint in the bright, artificial Seelie sunlight as they heave them around, stabbing through
Seelies who all seem completely unaffected by it.
I don’t know what to do. The world seems to be swimming
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around me, but I can’t tell if it’s from pain or because I feel
like I can’t really breathe or if it really is pitching and heaving to and fro. I try to struggle back to my house, but I feel like
I am never going to get there. I wonder where everyone else
is, if they’re okay, if the house is even still standing. The street in front of me is still a frothy tempest of concrete and cars.
And I feel like I have barely taken two steps when my
mother says, with false sweetness, “Selkie.”
I wince at the pinch of the pain, not as severe as when the
other Seelie used my name. My mother, I think, is just toying
with me, the way Ben said: the Seelies like to toy.
“I don’t think we finished our discussion,” she says pleas-
antly as she falls into step behind me.
I limp another step forward, feeling like every bone in my