I sighed, unsure which was the least pleasant prospect, being lost alone, or being lost with this dark-haired mage. I did not argue his control of the reins and let him steer us into the trees.
“I did have other plans for the night,” I muttered under my breath.
“Not important ones.”
“You don’t know what I was about, so how can you judge?”
“Well, perhaps I should say, my needs are more important than yours.”
“Excuse me,” I took the reins back from him, annoyed. “My horse. It is awfully dismissive of you to assume your needs are more important than mine when you don’t know what they are.”
“That spot over there,” he pointed as we entered the trees. There was a space between the trees that I would have normally avoided, its circumference uncomfortably round, too similar to a fairy circle for me to step without unease within it, although I could see that it was not marked as such. The trees grew heavily around this spot, but one had fallen, creating a gap in the canopy through which the moon shone like a beacon.
“You’re a village girl on a horse riding to the neighbouring village during the night at a walk,” he continued. If someone were dying, you would ride at speed. Therefore, my guess is that you intended to see a witch or a warlock for a love spell. As I said, my needs are more important.”
“I was riding to a good-witch. My mother is convinced that my baby brother is a changeling.”
“Unlikely,” he replied as I drew Coryfe to a stop. “Your mother will get over it.” He slid from the horse. “We should start a fire.”
I was tempted to urge Coryfe on and leave him behind. However, he was a mage. I did not know what other spells he had that he might use against me if I tried to do so, and that same magic might be useful in keeping me alive until I found my way back home.
“Just be wary,” I cautioned him. “This spot is very circular. Perhaps the foliage hides a fairy circle?”
“Nonsense,” he dismissed my concerns. “I would sense the magic if it were so.”
I dismounted and unsaddled Coryfe as the mage sat on one of the branches of the fallen tree and drew from a bag he wore under his cloak, a small book, bound in leather, with curls of metal protecting the corners and clasping the covers shut.
“We need a fire,” he said to me, his fingers stroking the cover reverently. There was no writing on the cover or binding, but I could see something had been embossed into the leather. Perhaps the embossing was the shadow of writing that had once been picked out with ink, but which time had faded or flaked away.
“Then you should gather some wood,” I suggested. “If you wish me to use my bow to catch something to eat.”
He looked up at me and arched his heavy brows. “Is that right?” I met his eyes and raised my eyebrows back. He returned the book to his bag. “Very well,” he agreed standing and began to collect the dead wood off the forest floor.
I hesitated, unwilling to leave him with Coryfe whilst I hunted. I might return to no horse and no mage.
“I feel we have a trust issue,” he observed.
He flicked his long black locks back over his shoulders. The tips of his ears parted the hair, delicately pointed. There was some Fae or Elven heritage in his lineage, I realised. It would explain the wild beauty of his features. I had never seen someone with brethren so recently in their line that their ears retained the points, however.
There had been a time, in the past, where the fairy brethren and mankind had intermingled more freely, and there were many families who held a strain from somewhere in their past as a result. More recently, at least according to tale, the Fae were more likely to take a child sired with mankind back into their realm, thus seeing someone with Fae heritage amongst us, was becoming rarer.
I knew this only through story, there was no one of brethren heritage in my village that I knew of. But, according to the stories, they were usually identifiable only by their unusual beauty, a certain grace of movement, or a light in the eye. This mage certainly possessed all of those charms.
“How do you propose we surmount that?” He asked me.
“How about you give me that book, and I trust you enough to leave you with Coryfe?” I suggested boldly.
He considered me for a long moment. “I went to a great deal of effort to get this book,” he said slowly, reluctant to part with it.
“Then you’ll be less likely to ride off on my horse,” I held out my hand.
“Don’t open it,” he cautioned me bringing the book out of his bag. “It’s magic.” I put the book into my bag. He watched the transfer suspiciously. “What is your name, girl?” he asked me.
“What is yours?” Names were tricky things. In the wrong hands, they could be used for mischief.
“Rivyn,” he met my eyes with his. I did not think he lied.
“Siorin.”
His lips curled in something that might have been a smile on another face, but on his was just a baring of teeth. His premolars were the same length as his canines, and both were sharply pointed. He was definitely not all mankind, I noted warily, wondering if I had fallen into a brethren trap of some sort. He had, after all, well and truly lured me from my path.
“Well, now that we’re officially acquainted, how about you find us something to eat?”
I took my bow and arrow deeper into the trees, keeping my ears pricked for the sound of hooves, not quite trusting Rivyn would not make off with Coryfe despite the book in my bag. I reached inside in order to feel it’s binding, reassuring myself that it was truly there. It had occurred to me that the mage might magic it away somehow.
Not a Fae forest he had said, however my stalking through the undergrowth scattered a family of stick-like imps, sending them scurrying away in a wild rustling of leaves, and further along, what looked to be the floating of thistledown in the breeze, was actually a flock of fairies harvesting the sweet sap that oozed from the trees.
I had just felled an unfortunate rabbit when I noticed something glinting, suspended between the trees. I drew closer, suspiciously.
There was a fairy entangled in a spider web. I could not tell its gender as it was trussed so tightly, with only its little feet and part of its face visible. Its struggles had attracted the attention of the web’s owner, and the fat spider was making its way towards its victim.
“It’s my night for rescues,” I commented to it. It hissed at me. “Come now, that’s no way to treat someone who’s trying to help.” I used my dagger to slice it free of the web, sending the spider scurrying, and knelt to carefully unwind the sticky gossamer from the captive.
It took some time, and I heard the mage call my name in the distance.
“Fool of a man,” I muttered to the fairy. “He will alert the whole forest to our location.” I worked the last of the web free as I heard the crack of sticks beneath Rivyn’s step.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“Freeing my little friend, here,” I told him, leaning back so he could see the object of my efforts. “He was stuck in a web.” It a fairy man, with a cap of golden hair, his trousers and tunic sewn from leaves. He had stopped fighting me and seemed content to sit whilst I eased the last threads away from his delicate wings. He inspected himself with the air of someone much put out by his adventure.
“Oh dear,” I sighed, and took a scone from my bag, pulling off a crumb and offering it to the little man. He accepted it, and ate ravenously, his sharp little teeth making quick work of the crumb. I gave him a second. “His wing is broken.”
His wings reminded me of a dragon fly, so fragile and sheer that I could see through them, threaded with delicate veins, and possessing a pearlescent sheen. The tip of this fairy man’s wing had become folded in the spider’s tangle and did not straighten. It did not appear to hurt the fairy, but I could not see how it would be possible for him to fly.
I looked up at Rivyn. He was watching me with the oddest expression on his face. “You’d have been better off leaving him to the spider,” he replied, “he won’t survive with a broken wing.”
“Will it heal, do you think?” I wondered.
“Do I look like a fairy healer?” He arched his brows at me.
“I can’t leave him here to die,” I watched the little man stand and brush himself off. He fluttered his wings, perhaps in an effort to straighten the damaged tip, but it continued to sag. He inspected the damage trying to straighten it between his hands. He made a squeaking sound that might have contained words but was pitched too high and from too small a throat for me to understand. “Will you come?” I asked him, showing him my bag. He regarded me suspiciously. “Do you understand me?”
The mage reached into my bag and plucked out his book. “Most fairy creatures speak the common tongue,” he told me, smoothing the cover of the book beneath his fingers covetously. “He should... ah, see.” The little fairy man stepped onto my hand and let me transfer him into the bag. “He’ll eat whatever you have in there,” Rivyn cautioned me. “Fairies are always hungry.”
“I caught a rabbit,” I reclaimed it from the grasses.
“Oh, good,” he looked pleased. “I am hungry.”
We returned to Coryfe. There was a good pile of wood ready for the fire, but the pieces were small - fallen wood, without any density – and we would burn through it in the time it took to cook the rabbit. If we had an axe to chop with, the trunk of the dead tree would have enough wood for a hundred fires, but, unfortunately, we did not have anything between us. Luckily, the weather was milder than my village. We would not feel the lack of fire overnight and our cloaks would provide sufficient warmth.
I cleared an area, and began building a little fire, using my fire striker to start it.
Rivyn returned to his log and angled to capture the moonlight across the pages of his book as he opened it. I saw his hair lift in a draft of magical energy.
“How can you read in such poor light?” I asked him.
“It’s magic,” he was distracted. “It’s not written in ink. You wouldn’t understand.”
“What’s so important about that book?” I prepared the rabbit to cook, skinning and gutting it.
“It has power. Every little bit counts.” He looked at me. “I am trying to read,” he reprimanded.
“Sorry,” I grumbled, spitting the rabbit and propping it over the flames. I checked on the fairy man. He had helped himself to more scone, and seemed content to sit and eat, his wings pressed against an apple. He looked up at me and said something. “I’m sorry, I can’t understand.”
“He compliments the cook.”
“Ah,” I smiled at the small man. “I’ll pass it along.” If I ever made it back home. I watched the sun rise over the trees, and noted the direction thinking I could use my lode stone to direct our travels. “How far from where we were could we be now?”
“Unlimited,” Rivyn didn’t look up from his book.
“Unlimited as in...”
“We could be anywhere,” he replied with complete indifference.
“Anywhere in the land?” I qualified.
“Anywhere in the world.” He looked up at me. “Don’t worry so much. We will continue into the forest, and sooner or later, we will work out where we are. If it is not somewhere useful, I’ll collect some spell components and cast another portal.”
“That’s all very well for you to say,” I pointed out. “I’ve been taken against my will to an unknown location by a man I met on the road. There are stories that begin this way, and they never end well.”
He snorted. “Fool’s tales designed to scare maidens and housewives into obedience.”
“How is that so?” I rotated the rabbit. It was starting to smell good. Like the mage, I was hungry.
“Beware the Fae man who will steal you away,” he laughed derisively. “What use has a Fae man for a mankind girl when he has Fae women? It is more likely to be the other way around. Is that rabbit done yet? I am hungry.”
“If you like your meat raw, it is done.”
“Throw me one of those scones, then,” he ordered. “Preferably one that hasn’t fairy tooth marks in it.” He was fussy, I thought, for someone without his own supplies, but I threw him a scone. He caught it, easily, one handed, and took a bite as he turned the page. He frowned slightly as he read.
“You speak as if you know the Fae,” I commented thinking that a parent would explain the origin of his pointed ears and teeth, and unusual beauty. Was he a stolen child, like from story? The result of a romantic dalliance between a Fae man and a mankind woman, taken back after birth to be raised by his Fae-parent? But then, if that were so, surely, he would not be so derisive of Fae men taking mankind women, and why would he be out of the Fae Forests and lands?
“And you speak as if you do not,” he replied. “I’m trying to read.”
We sat in silence broken only by Coryfe’s movements, the crackle of flames and sizzle of roasting rabbit, and the occasional turn of a page. “So, what is more important than my changeling brother?” I asked him as I took the rabbit off the fire and divided it. “That justifies stealing me from the roadside?”
He put the book back into his bag. “Magic power. Mine was stolen from me. I need to reclaim it before the month’s end, or it will be gone forever.”
Coryfe picked his way through the trees like a child picking their way through a meal. I could not blame him. The floor was thick with undergrowth that hid hazardous roots and dips, and every now and again, an unexpected explosion of brethren folk would be unsettled by our passage. He had almost shied twice now at such an occurrence; once when little sprites that had exploded from a bush he had brushed against, their gossamer dragon-fly wings whipping against us as they passed, and the second time when a scurry of fur-clad beings I did not get a good look at had raced across our path, pursued by a fox that stopped and looked at us with too wise, unafraid blue eyes. Rivyn was less patient. “Have you never ridden this horse across anything other than a road or field?” He demanded, reaching around to claim the reins from me. I held them out of his reach, and he blew out a frustrated breath. “He isn’t my horse, he is my father’s,” I replied.
The stream was more of a river, too deep to ride across, and we had to ride downstream for some way before we came to a stone arch of a bridge, green with moss. I threw the last scone over the edge. “In case there’s a troll,” I explained to him when Rivyn protested. “And if there’s not?” he wondered as he guided Coryfe across. He held the reins in one hand, his other wrapped around my middle. I was sure I was not imagining that he was riding closer to me, his chest now firmly pressed against my back and my legs resting against his. He had taken over the stirrups, too. “Well, something will eat it, I’m sure.” Beyond the bridge, the grass began to show wear, gradually forming into a road. “We’re on a road now, so we’ll come upon somewhere eventually,” I was happy about that. I did not like being ignorant as to where we were, and hopefully, if there was a village or a town, we could find lodgings overnight. I hoped the mage would pay. I had
Mages spell components were both odd and slightly disgusting, I decided, as I picked through the inn keeper’s kitchen. It was a large room, used not just for the preparation of food, but for much of the family’s time. The walls were lined with shelves holding everything from crockery to buckets, and the roof was strung with hocks of meat and drying herbs. Rivyn had to duck to avoid some of the beams, warped and roughly shaped, they seemed to sag in places. The floor was stone, scattered with thresh and debris from the cooking, resulting in a less than savoury scent if it was kicked up underfoot. A bench was set along one wall, and shelves on the other. The shelves held a fascinating array of jars and items I could not even begin to identify. From the dust that gathered around and on top of most of the items, I imagined the innkeeper’s wife could not identify them either. In the centre of the room was a large table
Stable boys waited in the shade of the pillars and ran up to us as we dismounted Coryfe. Rivyn exchanged a coin with one of them and I watched them take the horse behind the imposing building wondering if I would see him again. Rivyn took my hand in his as we began to mount the stairs. “We shall lead them to believe that we are married,” he looked down at me. “Understood?” “Yes.” Did he say to do so to preserve an element of respectability, or to prevent our separation? Either way, I was happy to continue under the guise of his wife. I might be facing ruination in my village having been stolen by a man from the road and having spent many days and nights in his company now, but that did not mean I wanted to advertise it to others. Following the steps led us between the pillars. There was a space held between them and the face of the building, along which I could see seating had been placed. There were no windows. I
“We’ll discuss this further in less formal settings,” the woman announced grandly. The figures on the raised seating rose and began to shuffle out murmuring amongst themselves, as if her words were some pre-arranged signal for them to depart. The woman stepped off the dais and walked towards us. Her eyebrows and eyelashes were the same white as her hair. Her eyes were cold and speculative, I thought. “You can drop your guard,” she told Rivyn. I felt him relax, and he dropped his arm. “You are a very interesting couple,” she looked at us with interest but not hostility. “Come, we will have something to drink, and discuss why you are here, and where you came from.” “Siorin?” Rivyn murmured as he took my hand and followed her to the door which the robed audience had used to exit. I looked up at him, meeting his eyes. There was concerned enquiry in his. He wondered where it was that I had been taken and whether I had e
She is precious to me. I turned that odd statement over in my head as I followed the boy out of the building. We passed the stables, and a kitchen garden, before passing through a door in a wall, out onto a side street. Rivyn was referring to either his source of virgin hair or his belief that I was part of his destiny spell, I decided. I doubted very much that I had anything to do with his destiny. The fact that he had cast the spell and then I had passed by on the road did not mean anything. If he had cast the spell, and then my mother had decided Fiane was a changeling would have been different. But I had been already set on my path before the spell was cast, it had not changed anything. Except... it had been a contributing factor to him taking me through the portal with him, changing my destiny. I did not yet know if that change was for the better or worse. “What sort of supplies do you need?” the boy ask
I began to pin the excess material at the waist and down his thighs, fitting the trousers around his legs to be more pleasing to the eye. By necessity, this fitting meant I was touching him in an overly familiar way, and I knew the colour was rising in my cheeks. He watched me, his eyes smouldering in a way that made my skin feel hot and my body ache. “You can take them off, now,” I said to him. Our eyes locked. His were a true blue with no shadow of other colours in them, no flecks of brown or gold. I drew in an unsteady breath and released the ties that closed the front. His hand closed over mine, and he pressed my palm against the hot skin of his stomach, sliding it down, through the crisp hair at his groin, to close over his hardness. His eyes closed and his head rocked back on his neck as he guided my hand along him. “ - Siorin,” he moaned, his other arm coming behind my back, drawing me closer.
I was the changeling, I thought, dazed, as his words began to make sense. A siren changeling. My voice had magic. A different sort of magic to the sharp, bitter metallic tang of the mages. I possessed the sort of magic that lured ogres to sleep when lullabies were sung, and mages to spill their seed when I cried out in pleasure. “A -ing virgin siren,” he continued with amusement. “A very unusual commodity. Virginity is a misogynistic concept of course, but when it comes to spell components, the repressed sexuality does give a bit of a power kick that cannot be denied. Monks or other aesthetics’ hair is excellent. Years of repression there. Alright, let us get dressed. I have a book to read.” He released me and rose, reaching for a drying cloth as he stepped out of the water. He passed me a cloth as he worked his through his hair. He had answered why I was precious to him, I thought as I rose from the water, less concerned with my nudity
I stared at her in the reflection, my face showing my bafflement. The queen and the Fae woman both chuckled, but there was no malice to their laughter. “I’m not sure I understand,” I said carefully.“Marriage amongst the Fae and magical brethren is much simpler than amongst mankind,” she said gently and with patience, resting her hand upon my shoulder. The Fae woman resumed styling my hair, setting the circlet into the locks. “It’s an invocation of the rule of threes. Three openings to refuse, three declarations of intent, and, of course, three consummations...” she arched her eyebrows, prompting me. “Did Rivyn never mention the rule of three, to you?”My chest tightened as my heart picked up speed. Remember, anything important involves threes, Siorin, Rivyn had said to me. The conversation had struck me then, as out of place. He had been, I thought, trying to tell me that he had ta
We stepped out of the portal, and Rivyn drew in a deep breath. I looked up at him. The expression on his handsome face held confliction - joy and trepidation. He was glad to be home, but the culmination of the past three weeks risk and strain lay ahead of him, and, even after two peaceful days in Benal reading Isyl’s book, he was weary from our adventures. “Rivyn,” I wrapped my arms around his waist, trying to offer him reassurance, where my own heart raced in fear for him. “You have faced dwarves, ogres, mages, Dark Elves, pirates, mermaids, a dragon, and you have torn a city apart in your anger. You can do this.” He pressed a kiss to the crown of my head. “Thank you, my wife,” he murmured. “I appreciate the encouragement.” We stood before an arched fortified gate build of the white stone that seemed to be used throughout the city and castle beyond, the portcullis raised, points frighteningly lethal overhead, and
We stepped out of the portal into Benal, and I felt as if I had come a full circle in my adventures. I was where I had intended to be when I set out the night that I had encountered Rivyn in the forest.Isyl’s pretty little cottage was set on the edge of the forest where it opened into Benal.Immediately upon her arrival, there was a flurry of activity as the fairy folk came to greet Isyl in her flower-strewn garden.“Yes, yes,” she said. “He is. They’re very flustered by the arrival of royalty,” she told me taking my hand and drawing me up her path as the fairy folk gathered around Rivyn, the rise and fall of their voices indicating that he was being bombarded with questions.“Oh, I guess,” he cast a look towards us, almost pleading for rescue.“Come inside and have a cup of tea,” Isyl denied it, leading me within
I woke alone to a bright morning with no sign of dragons in the sky. The city was eerily quiet, the residents still hesitant to venture out of their houses for fear of the Dark Elves that had terrorised the castle overnight. I wondered what remained of the castle and the mages’ college. Hopefully, very little. My mouth felt much better. There were no sharp spots of pain, no feeling of swelling as result of injury, but it felt delicate and fragile, as if the wounds were closed, but only just so. I touched my face trying to determine how badly the tears on my lips had scarred, frightened to find out. There was no surface within the room that would show me my reflection. “She can smell magic, and she walked through a mage spell as if it were a stroll around the garden,” Rivyn had left the bedroom door open when he had left, and his voice drifted up the stairs to me clearly. “I know very little about sirens, even less about half-sirens...”
As if Rivyn had cast a spell of invisibility around us, he strode through the castle grounds unnoticed and unbothered. Around us, the castle servants and courtiers ran in screaming chaos, pursued by the Dark Elves, and harried by Aurien’s swoops and flames. Rivyn’s stride was unhurried, and his path unwavering.“I can walk,” I told him, “you are injured.”He shifted his grip on me, cradling me against his shoulder. “I am fine,” he said firmly. “Where is this good-witch?” He asked the half-Ogre as we passed out of the castle grounds. The street beyond the castle wall was quiet. In the distance I saw a woman run across the street into a building, slamming the door shut behind her.“This way,” the half-Ogre led us between two buildings.“You saved me,” I murmured.“Don’t speak until we ca
I closed my eyes. I could understand why that secret would be closely kept by the sirens. If the brethren knew that half-sirens could sing brethren to death, sirens would be hunted by both mankind and brethren alike. It would be motivation enough for a woman to kill her child, or herself. In mankind’s hands, a half-siren could sing mermaids to land, Fae ships to wreckage, dragons into man-form... In mankind’s hands, a half-siren was a weapon.“We want you to sing,” the Queen said softly. “We want you to make this ogre take his own life.”I looked at the man. “I am more than happy to sing a wind for you, my Queen, because that is within my powers, but I will not even attempt that.”“Sing them to death,” the half-ogre growled at me. “Sing them into jumping through the windows to their own doom.” One of his armoured guards backhanded him, and the young
Saphaqiel reunited us with Coryfe and Florien, at the waterfall. “No more foolishness, now,” she said sternly to Rivyn. “Finish this and take your wife home. She needs time to recover from the venom.” He smiled at her. “Thank you, Saphaqiel,” he said with warmth. “Thank you for your kindness and care.” There was a moment between them where they held each other’s eyes, and then she inclined her head with a smile, and winged away, leaving me wondering what it was that had gone unspoken. Florien fussed around us, chattering. “He is less than pleased at being left to look after Coryfe,” Rivyn told me. “He wanted to be in the Earies rather than below.” He replied to the fairy with a tone of sufferance, at length, until the fairy man seemed contented, and landed on Coryfe’s head. The way through the forest was easier due to our labour on the way in, and we reached the shoreline swiftly. Rivyn dismo
I felt someone lift me to sitting, and a warm, salty liquid dribbled into my mouth. I swallowed.“Good girl,” a woman spoke. “Strong girl.” She continued to feed me small amounts of the broth, its ingredients unfamiliar to me. “Your man will be back soon, don’t you worry.” She lowered me back against something soft.I heard movement, felt the brush of feathers against my arm, and water being poured. “We’ll give you a nice wash whilst we wait,” she returned to my side and used a cloth to wash my hands and arms, neck and face, lifting the cloth that lay over my eyes before lowering it quickly.I realised that I was naked as she washed down my chest, and then my feet and legs. She covered me with a blanket. I felt her fingers in my hair, shaking something in and rubbing it through the strands before brushing it out. “There you are, beautiful again,” she
As the ship approached the white curve of beach and the jutting pier of Ilith Cape, Rivyn’s eyes watched the wheeling birds. The sailor’s voices rose as they lowered the sails and prepared to drop anchor. I saw a flash of light as one of the birds vanished in the air. The village on the shore looked like a child’s drawing, the details stolen by distance, but eventually I could see the smaller fishing boats bobbing in the water, and figures along the sand, watching our approach. “What is next for you?” Valhared joined us at the balustrade, leaning his elbows on it. We watched as the sailors lowered the rowboat over the side of the ship, preparing for our departure. “Another book, another adventure,” Rivyn replied lightly. “Three more, and then home. And you, my friend? Will you retire now?” Valhared laughed. “No, not I,” he shook his head. “I’ll take the treasure to my safe haven, divide a goo