Read The Last Faerie Queen Online

Authors: Chelsea Pitcher

Tags: #teen, #teen lit, #teen reads, #ya, #ya novel, #ya fiction, #ya book, #young adult, #young adult fiction, #young adult novel, #young adult book, #fantasy, #faeries, #fairies, #fey, #romance, #last changeling, #faeries, #faery, #fairy queen, #last fairy queen

The Last Faerie Queen (7 page)

7

T
ayl
o
R

In the morning, I woke to the sound of whispering in my ear. I rolled over, hoping to see Elora's beautiful face. But my disappointment was twofold—it wasn't Elora, and the effects of that damned drug hadn't worn off.

Faeries were still everywhere.

They crawled through the trees, across the ground,
in the air.
My head felt dizzy just looking around. But this time, they weren't interested in surrounding me and making me feel uncomfortable. They passed me by, or flew over me, ignoring me completely. Like I wasn't even there.

I turned around, looking to commiserate with the twins, only to find that they weren't actually there. Alexia was gone too. It was just me, and the faeries, and this giant oak in the center of the clearing, which now had something in front of it.

I stepped up to the tree. The oak's body spilled across the ground, separating into four fat legs. A flat, bench-like space, covered in leaves and mosses, sat between the two front legs, and a large easel, complete with brushes and paints, rested in front of it.

“Oh, boy. This is going to suck.”

“Better to suck than to blow,” said a voice, and I whipped my head around.

“What the—who said that?”

Something giggled into my ear.

I looked up. The creature was twice the size of my thumb, with a humanoid body and a heart-shaped mouth. Dragonfly wings. But the weirdest thing was the way her head shot up into a red point, like a horn. Or maybe a blood-tipped thorn.

I hope that's not what it is
.

When the faerie tugged at my earlobe, I resisted the urge to swat her away. I didn't want to accidentally break her arm. Besides, there's something really awkward about swatting a naked thing. Especially if that thing is kind of a person.

Kind of?

No wonder the dark faeries hated humanity.

I decided to be polite. “Hi there,” I said, running my hand over the canvas. It felt familiar, like shaking hands with an old friend. “Where'd everyone go?”

“Different places, with different faeries.”

“Who? Where?” I asked, nervous that we'd all been separated so quickly.

“Who?” the faerie mimicked. “Where? You know, for someone who speaks Human as his first language, your verbal skills are incredibly stilted.”

“I can speak with perfect eloquence if I feel so inclined,” I said, drawing out the words dramatically. “Forgive me. I'm adjusting.”

“I forgive you,” she said, ignoring my sarcasm.

“I'm ever so grateful,” I muttered as she landed on my outstretched hand. Her skin had a violet sheen, like she'd been rolling in glitter. “Will you tell me where they are?”

“No.”

I yanked my hand away.

She fell several inches before catching herself. “But I might tell you with whom. If you're nice.”

“I'm nice. I'll be nice.”

“And do
everything
I say.”

“I'm not an idiot.”

She giggled. “Smarty,” she said, tugging at my pants. “Smarty pants. Isn't that something they say?”

She looked up, and I thought she was talking to the oak. But when I followed her gaze, I saw dozens of tiny, horn-tipped faces staring back at me. They shrieked, disappearing into the holes in the tree.

“Can we focus?” I sat on the bench and gestured for the faerie to join me. She settled in on my knee. “Tell me about my friends.”

“The little one's off with the brownies,” she said, “making a secret weapon for the princess. Brownies know all about tools and trinkets and general forms of blacksmithery.”

“Blacksmithery?”

“Yeah, uh … ” She looked to the tree. “Isn't that what humans say? Blacksmithery and jackassery and general buffoonery?”

“They say lots of dopey stuff,” replied a voice.

“Tough talk coming from someone who won't even show her face,” I said.

A face appeared in one of the holes of the tree, all teeth and tongue. I stuck out my tongue at her. I couldn't help it. These faeries brought out the kid in me.

“What about Alexia?” I asked when the face disappeared.

“The one who could've been a nymph?” asked the faerie. “She's in session with the Bright Queen.”

“Session? Like school?”

“Uh huh. Acting school,” she said vaguely.
Typical faerie.

“What part is she playing?” I asked.

“The part of the princess
.

“What? Why?”

“Because the princess cannot tell a lie. But if her followers ask about you … ”

“She can't tell the truth.”

“Exactly. So if things go badly at the border, the mortal girl can travel there, pretending to be the princess, and put on a show.”

“Do you think things are going to go badly?” I asked, blood rushing through my ears. I tried to listen for sounds of distant distress, but Elora was too far away to be heard.

“I think the princess is very clever,” the faerie said. “But it is better to be safe than sorry. At least, that's what the mortal girl said.”

“Sounds like Alexia,” I agreed. “What about Keegan?”

The faerie was coy. “Oh,
him
? He refuses to tell the Bright Lady how he can help. He'll only tell the princess.” She giggled into her hand. “He's off with the satyrs, studying
other
things.”

“Lucky him.”

“Aw, is the mortal lonely? Does he need me to make him feel better?”

“I don't even know how that would work,” I said.

She shrugged. “We always find a way.”

“I bet. But I'm not interested. As you've probably heard, I'm in bed with the enemy. Or, at least … ”

“You'd like to be?” She flashed a grin.

I studied her for a minute. “It doesn't bother you, does it? You don't dislike her like the others do.”

“I live in the borderlands.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning … ” She rose, fluttering directly beside my ear. “The servants on the borderlands sometimes become friendly.”

“Seriously? Elora didn't tell me anything about that.”

She laughed, and it reverberated through my ear canal. “She doesn't know! You think we'd tip off the royals? They'd have our heads.”

“Our
heads
!” came a chorus from the tree.

“Well, your secret's safe with me,” I promised, wondering if Elora knew more than this faerie suspected. Wondering if Naeve did.

“Hey, when we were in the graveyard,” I whispered, so only this faerie could hear, “the Prince of the Dark Court said something about Elora. He said she'd always been her
father's
daughter. Do you know what that means?”

The faerie shook her head. But she didn't say no, and I thought that was significant. Like, maybe she
couldn't
say it.

“He said it was a secret,” I pressed. “And since
secret
couplings are something you know about, I wondered … ”

“I cannot speak of it!” the faerie hissed. Darting away from me, she disappeared into the tree.

Ah, so I've struck a nerve
, I thought. But it wasn't that surprising. Elora had pretty much told me the entire history of Faerie, but she'd never mentioned her father. I didn't think she even knew who he was. I didn't think her mother wanted her to know.

“Okay, well, I'll just be here,” I said, picking up my paintbrush. “All alone in the forest.”

The faerie poked her head out of a hole. At least, I thought it was the faerie I'd been talking to, but I couldn't tell for certain. They all had pale skin and scarlet horns. Still, it was probably annoying when people couldn't tell them apart. If I could just study her more closely …

“Hey, I have an idea,” I called, dipping the paintbrush into some red paint. “It's been a long time since I've done this. If I could paint an actual subject, it'd really help get the creative juices flowing.”

The faerie flitted out of the opening but didn't come any closer. “Oh yeah?”

“Yeah,” I said. Brushing the canvas in an upward stroke, I drew a little red horn. “The color is just perfect.”

She inched closer, those wings buzzing furiously. “Is that going to be
me
?” she asked. Her entire body was blushing.

“That's the idea,” I said casually. “You could even keep it after, if you want.”

“I do. I
want
.” Her gaze shifted from me to the canvas, and she was smiling so big. It kind of made my heart hurt to see how obsessed the faeries were with humanity. The bright faeries
needed
to be close to us. The dark faeries
needed
to destroy us. What had life been like for them before humans came along? Were they happier then?

The dark faeries were
, I thought, and a shiver ran through me. The dark faeries would do anything to revert to a world without humanity. But if I could discover the Dark Lady's secret, maybe Elora could use it to gain leverage over her. Or over Naeve.

“I just need one little piece of information,” I said, pulling the brush away from the canvas.

The faerie zipped close to my ear. “I don't know the secret,” she said.

“Who
does
?” I swirled my brush in a little bowl of water. Next, I mixed white paint with red and blue, to match the faerie's skin tone. Her eyes followed me hungrily.

“Naeve knows,” she confirmed. “And the
other
Lady. The one whose name I'm forbidden to speak.”

“Who's forbidden you?” I asked, trying to remember the Dark Lady's name. Virayla?

“Who do you think?” She fluttered closer, breath tickling my ear. “The same faerie who has the information you seek. The Bright Queen.”

–––––

That night, after I met up with my friends, the Queen's “favored ladies” gave us humans a tour of the grounds. They showed us a waterfall where we could bathe, and strange petals we could rub against our bodies to get clean. They even had leaves that tasted like mint and left our teeth feeling like they'd just been brushed. The only thing left to hope for was a toilet, and while I wasn't expecting running water and porcelain, the faeries' version of a bathroom was actually pretty impressive.

First of all, it was private, situated beneath a gigantic tree that split open at the base to let us in. Even Kylie could wheel in and out with relative ease. There were vines hanging over the entrance, to block passersby from looking inside, and the toilet itself looked fairly comfortable, formed out of mud and covered in vines. To the left sat a stack of moss-colored leaves.

When Maya de Lyre came up behind me, whispering, “It's mostly a hole glamoured to look like a toilet,” I actually laughed. There's something unsettling about being given
everything
you want, without even having to ask.

So I leaned back and said, “As long as there's not poison ivy glamoured to look like TP, I'll be okay.” 

She smiled, taking my hand. “I have a surprise for you.”

My heart leapt. Had she already figured out a way to free me from the Seelie Queen? And how? A dozen scenarios danced through my head as she led me down a path filled with brambles and vines. Had she sacrificed a virgin? No. That's something the dark faeries might do, but not the bright. Had she performed an amazing, non-stop dance for twenty-four hours? Had she given up
her
freedom? I was about to ask. But suddenly we burst into a clearing, and the words died on my lips.

In their place, new ones were born. “Holy wicked arsenal, Batman.”

Maya de Lyre smiled, turning to me. “You like it?”

I stepped up to the green, woven blanket spread out across the grass. And on the blanket was, well, everything my mind could conjure. Knives, all laid out in a line, arranged from smoothest blade to most jagged edge. Beside them was an ax, big enough to take down a giant, and next to that— 

“Good God, is that a
flail
?”

Maya de Lyre giggled like I'd asked her on a date. “It is indeed.”

“Whose weapons are these? Are these yours?” I asked, heart pounding and hands tightening to fists. It was hard to keep my distance, hard not to pick up one of those blades and start swinging.

“No. They're yours,” she said.

I spun to face her. “Um … what?”

“I gathered them for you. I thought you would like them.”

The hairs stood up on the back of my neck. “I do, but … ” I tried to stay rational, tried to remind myself of the rules of Faerie.

Faeries rarely do anything for free.
Isn't that what Elora had told me, back in the mortal world?
They like trades.

“What will it cost me?” I asked.

“Nothing, dear mortal.
Taylor
,” she added, as if we were fast friends. And maybe we were. Maybe we could be.

Maybe this was exactly what it seemed. I stepped forward, not touching any of the weapons yet, just looking at them. They were so shiny. God, they were so sharp. They were perfect.

“So I can take them and not give anything back?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“What made you think I'd want them?”

She tilted her head like the question was strange. Like all of this—the water to bathe in, the weapons, my
every desire
being granted
—
was perfectly normal, and I was the weird one.

“Isn't it common for mortal boys to dream of weapons?” she asked. “Admittedly, we do not have guns or … explosives. We faeries have other ways of dealing with adversity.”

“Like magic.”

“Like magic. We can bring the storms. Bring floods. Bid the forest to wake. Shooting a single bullet seems … unnecessary.”

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