I'm not alone this time. Jeb carries the stolen sword, and we race down the path toward the Caterpillar's lair. The thorns that once snarled and ripped my pinafore elongate into leafy eels. The serpentine strands wrap around our legs and carry us upside down to the chessboard. Our bodies freeze into game pieces. A hand appears, wearing a black glove, and moves us from square to square. It picks me up to claim checkmate, but Jeb comes alive, slashing at the fingers with the sword to free me. The bloody digits fall one by one and morph into caterpillars. Jeb and I race back to the path. The mushroom waits in the center, cloaked in a web. The caterpillars beat us there. They tunnel into the cocoon, filling it until it writhes—a living, breathing thing. A razor-sharp black blade slices from within the webbed casing. Whatever's inside is coming out.
I awaken, startled, and blink against the sun's brightness. My hands are clenched into fists. What woke me up? I was so close to unveiling the face in the cocoon—the one I've been waiting years to see.
Yawning, I focus on the here and now. Sometime in the night, I must've turned toward Jeb in the rowboat, and he pulled me against himself, tucking me under his chin. All I see now is a close-up of his tank. He's still asleep. His heavy breath rustles my hair, slow and rhythmic. His arms clutch my waist.
Yesterday comes back to me in pieces: the rabbit hole, the mutant flower garden, the ocean of tears.
I snuggle into his neck, fingers curled within the sleeves of the tuxedo jacket, determined not to wake him so I can pretend things are simple and perfect for just a few minutes longer.
The boat rocks and I realize that's what woke me. Not a gentle, riding-on-a-current movement. More a something-heavy-sloughed-over-the-edge-and-is-watching-us movement…
I freeze—as rigid as the wood beneath us.
Guttural snuffles fill the air, like those of an asthmatic bulldog. The warmth of sun on my shoulders turns chilly as a shadow falls across us. My heart does a somersault. Before I can belt out a scream, Jeb snaps into action, rolling us toward the bow and jerking us to our feet. He was awake the whole time.
"No way," he says.
I wobble with the boat's motion, holding on to Jeb's waistband with one hand and the seat behind me with the other. I peer around him.
At first glance, our intruder looks like a walrus. He has two giant tusks with images of snakes and angry flames carved along the ivory. But beneath rolls of blubber, his lower half is a tangle of slithering octopus tentacles, covered in suction cups. It's as if someone snapped two different creatures together, creating an octo-walrus. He must weigh over five hundred pounds, and his body occupies most of the boat.
As huge as he is, and with his tentacles hanging half in and out, the boat should be capsized. Jeb and I should've been flung like stones from a slingshot as soon as he slithered aboard. Instead, the hull is level and drifting along the shining water as if the creature weighs no more than we do. Wonder what Isaac Newton would have to say about the jacked-up physical laws here?
Jeb nudges me to sit behind him but keeps standing, every muscle in his body tense and ready to snap. "What are you?"
Our uninvited guest scrapes oozing goop from his eyes with the human fingers on the ends of his flippers. "Fair question, elfin knight. I'm an octobenus. Now, let me guess your next question. What do I want? For that, there's a simple answer. I want to stop the endless suffering in my belly." Whiskers—long and blond against a cinnamon brown hide—droop under his nostril holes. His tentacles slap the ocean, spritzing us with water.
From the chain at his neck, he opens a locket the size of a cigar box and digs something out. He lays a clam in his palm, carefully holding its shell pinched shut. "Good morning, little sea cabbage," he taunts it. "Still worried about your family?"
The clam tries to open its mouth in answer. The octobenus repositions his hold to keep it quiet. "Tell you what. If you can stanch my hunger, I'll set all of them free. Willing to give it a try?"
Although the clam can't open its mouth wide enough to talk, a pinkish, hatchet-shaped muscle slinks out from the crack—like a malformed foot or arm—patting the enormous creature's cheek in a final bid for life.
A whimper bursts from my throat. Jeb reaches behind his back and opens his hand. I lace our fingers together.
In a rush of blubber and slobber, the octobenus forces the shell open, seals his mouth around it, and suctions out the contents with a terrible sucking sound. The clam's excruciating scream echoes in my head, then fades to dreadful silence. I grasp Jeb tighter, trying not to gag.
"Nope. Still hungry. Suppose I'll be eating your children next." Our unwelcome visitor laughs, an ugly, grinding sound, then tosses the empty shell overboard. He swats it with a tentacle so it sinks, and the motion makes the boat rock.
Jeb's fingers cinch around my wrist as he struggles to stay balanced.
"You must be swift with slimy prey like that," the octobenus says. "They're tricksters… always trying to capture you in their Deathspeak. Can you imagine, being a slave to a clam's final wish?" He laughs again.
Deathspeak… that phrase from the back of Alice's psych evaluation. I peer around Jeb as the walrusy creature wedges a monocle over his watery left eye.
"Now," he says, "if you would be so kind as to step aside, Elf, I might get a better look at your ward."
Jeb's stance tightens. "Not a chance."
The octo-freak drops his monocle. "Those bumbling flowers think that your blood has the power to buy me my fill of bivalves!" His shout rattles over us—through us—carrying the scent of fish and death. "But it's never been an issue of buying them. I'm a hunter. I must capture them. It is my nature. Clams are such crafty creatures, always using their little arms to move about and escape under their beds on the ocean floor. If only it weren't so dark down there, and with my eyes gone so bad… I'm lucky to capture a half dozen before they all hide." He wipes his mouth with a thick flipper. "But the Wise One owns a magic flute that calls my prey from their hiding places. And now I have a way to barter for it."
"By offering my blood in exchange," Jeb guesses.
This can't be happening. I don't care how many fights he's been in at home. Even with a Swiss Army knife, he doesn't stand a chance against a five-hundred-pound sea monster.
"He's not a jeweled elf!" I shout from behind Jeb. "He's human. Look at his ears."
Jeb squeezes my fingers—a plea to keep quiet.
"Doesn't matter either way. Jewels and riches mean nothing to the Wise One. But you, little cabbage, he's desperate for your help. Oh, yes. He's been waiting years for you to find your way here."
The statement churns in my head. The flowers said the Wise One is the Caterpillar. So… he's been waiting for me? Maybe the Caterpillar sent the moth and my dark guide to find me and bring me here.
Our captor's tentacles writhe along the boat's edges like giant pythons, and the wood creaks. "With you as hostage, I can barter for the flute. He will lay it at my feet for your safe deliverance."
"You'll have to kill me to get to her," Jeb says.
I jerk on his wrist but he ignores me.
The octobenus kneads his flipper-hands. "Ah, a loyal friend. I had one of those, many years ago. He was an artisan. He carved my tusks and crafted a beautiful trunk to hold my reserve of clams. Then I learned he was pilfering my supply. So one night as he slept, I captured him"—the tentacles curl around the boat in demonstration—"and locked him in the trunk with the empty shells. I cast the lot into the ocean to muffle his screams. His bones are fish bait now."
I bite my lip to keep from screaming.
Our captor laughs. "Dismal, isn't it? You see, if I would be so callous with a friend, what's to stop me from killing you? Nothing gets in the way of my belly's needs." He runs the thin, pointed end of a tentacle down to the tips of his slobbery tusks. "I will have the girl!"
He thrashes his tentacles and snags Jeb around the waist.
"No!" My arms dart out to hold him. The tentacles rip him away and lift him into the air.
"There's land… to your left!" Jeb shouts as he wrestles with the creature, barely missing the deadly tip of a tusk. The struggle jostles the boat.
Choking on more screams, I hold on to the seat to keep from falling. Jeb's right. There's something on the horizon. It glitters like black sequins. It could be the island the flowers told us about.
"Go!" Jeb yells. "I'll hold him off as long as I can!"
He grabs the chain around the monster's neck. With quick thrusts, he wraps up some tentacles so I can make my escape. One of the tusks slices through the knee of his pants. The sound of tearing fabric reminds me of the clam's horrible death. I can't let that happen to Jeb.
We'll never escape the octobenus in the water. How do we fight back? He has no obvious weakness… only a raging appetite.
"Wait!" I drop to my knees in front of him, acting on a sudden idea, hoping it works. "Please, free my friend, and I'll help you willingly."
"Al!" Jeb shouts.
"Give your word, nether-girl," our captor says, his face a blubbery sneer. "You know the rules… an oath from our kind cannot be broken, else your power will be lost."
I don't know why he's calling me nether-girl, but I'm willing to use it to my advantage. "I promise to help you."
"Not good enough," he says, winding Jeb's ribs tighter in his tentacles until Jeb groans. "Do it properly. Cover your heart… swear on your life-magic. And be very specific."
I hold my gaze on Jeb's bluing lips and slap my shaking palm to my chest. "I swear on my life-magic to help tame your appetite."
With a snarling turn of whiskers, he unwinds his tentacles and releases Jeb so he flops upright into the hull.
I throw my arms around Jeb's slimy clothes. He keeps me balanced in the boat as we stand together. He's coughing so hard, I can hardly hear his voice. "You should've… bailed."
"No," I whisper. "We stick together, remember?" Then I turn to our captor. "Mr. Octobenus, I know how to fill your belly. We can give cake to your clams."
Jeb frowns at me, finally catching his breath.
The creature eases back to his seat on a nest of tentacles, panting and snuffling from the exertion of the fight. "Do you mean you're offering me some clam cake?"
"No. The cake is for the clams," I answer. "To stretch your supply until we get you the flute. We have just the thing to grow your clams to the size of dinner plates." I turn my face to Jeb and mouth the words Eater becoming the eaten.
His face lights with understanding. He drags the backpack toward us. It's incredible how composed he is after almost getting impaled, crushed, and devoured.
The mutant walrus watches, curious.
Jeb opens the bandana to expose the cake with the words Eat Me spelled in raisins.
The octobenus whoops. "An amplifying pastry! Wherever did you find such a prize? I've never personally seen one work. They were outlawed after the Alice incident. No matter, no matter…" He opens the box on the chain again. The newest clam wrestles against him furiously.
"Give it here," the octobenus says. "If this fails, I gore out your mortal friend's entrails and feed them to the fishes." Drool seeps down his tusks and fills the carved images in slow, glistening slathers.
"Oh, it'll work." Jeb slides the cake across the hull. "I'd stake my life on it."
"You just did." The mutant walrus grunts as he bends to pick it up. Breaking off a crumb, he prepares to slide it into the crack of the clam's shell.
"You'll need to give it more than that," Jeb says, inching us toward the edge of the boat, backpack in hand. "As much as you can stuff into its mouth."
"Yes, yes. Just think of it! Clams as big as dinner plates…" Without looking up, he chuckles and breaks off a larger piece. Then, forcing the shell open, he shoves the cake inside and snaps it closed again.
Within seconds, the clam starts to shake along with the boat.
"Now!" Jeb dives overboard with my hand in his. A slap of tentacles grazes my legs, but then the warm water folds over us, and we sink. Jeb dog-paddles in front of me, his hair twirling like sea grass in the blue depths. He tugs on my wrist. I kick upward, my boots and clothes heavy and awkward in the water.
We surface and suck in deep breaths, swimming in place long enough to see what's happening in the boat. The clam stretches from the size of a makeup compact to that of a Dumpster.
In a strangely graceful display of blubber, fins, and tentacles, the octobenus realizes his misstep and tries to slide overboard. Too late. The giant shell opens, and a hatchet-shaped appendage springs out—as big and powerful as an anaconda. The muscle wraps around the octobenus and draws him into its mouth, slurping up tentacles like giant spaghetti noodles before slamming shut.
The boat buckles and cracks. In moments, the clam sinks into the ocean, leaving only foam and floating debris behind. Waves ripple around the wreckage, an eerily serene ending to such a violent scene.
Jeb holds my wrist and the backpack with one hand while using his other arm in a one-sided breast stroke to propel us toward the black beach.
Something pulls me downward.
I pump my legs until my calves cramp, trying to stay afloat. It's no use. I let go of Jeb, afraid to pull him down with me.
Swept underwater, I search for what's anchoring me, terrified a sea creature is to blame, yet there's nothing there. The weight seems to be centered at my waist, but I'm descending too fast to find it. I flail, arms and legs straining against the downward momentum. My lungs shriek for oxygen.
Jeb appears above me. The backpack descends behind him into the dark depths. I snap my legs and hands into action, clawing at the water. Jeb tries to pull me up by gripping under my arms. I jerk away, fighting him. Or maybe I'm fighting myself. Fighting my fear…
His expression is resolute as he grabs me. He refuses to give up, and that scares me more than anything. I shake my head.
Save yourself! my eyes tell him, but he's too stubborn to listen.
I want to tell him I'm sorry I dragged him into this. Instead, empty bubbles swirl between us.
A hot and heavy ache pushes at my chest. I bat at the water, trying to break through somehow, to make it disappear. My tears mix with Alice's and every thought blackens at the edges. Jeb's still pulling on me, but it's hopeless—we keep sinking.
As I'm about to surrender to unconsciousness, it dawns on me that the weight is coming from my skirt pocket. Numb, I pull out the sponge I picked up at the bottom of the rabbit hole.
What was once the size of a bite of cheese is now as big as a golf ball and growing. It glides down toward the bottom of the ocean, dragging the water with it, creating a whirlpool.
I'm free.
Holding on to each other, Jeb and I surface long enough to fill our lungs before the suction of the funnel captures us. The sponge is the size of a grapefruit now, and I can see the bottom of the ocean far beneath us.
I scream, clutching Jeb for dear life.
My eyes squeeze shut as we slam into something solid.
"Al," Jeb says, and that's when I notice I can breathe.
I gasp hungrily for air, open my eyes, and blink away the wetness. The ocean is gone. Flattened sea grass and piles of wet sand surround us. Puddles of water glimmer in places, reflecting the sun. In the distance, I spot our backpack. The island's black sands tower like a cliff above us—a climb we can't possibly make.
A few yards away, among the debris, the giant clam sits next to a mossy, decomposing trunk and smacks its bloody lips. I guess the octobenus ended up finding his artisan friend again, after all.
A breeze stirs, scented with fish and salt. I expect the sponge to be the size of a mountain. But there it is, next to my soggy boots, no bigger than a basketball. I pick it up. Hard to fathom that an entire ocean is contained inside.
Jeb helps me stand, and I drop the sponge. It lands with a splat.
Even though I'm weak and battered, a sense of accomplishment rushes through me. "We did it," I mumble, hardly able to grasp the meaning of the words. "We drained the ocean. Just like the flowers wanted us to."
"You did it," he answers. He pushes hair from my brow. "And you almost drowned in the process." Before I can respond, his warm, soft mouth touches my forehead, my temple, and then my jaw. Each time, his labret gently grazes my skin. He stalls at my jawline and bends to gather me close for a hug, nose tucked against my neck. "Never scare me like that again."
It doesn't matter that we're wet; heat radiates through our sopping clothes. I weave my gloves through his hair. "You came back for me."
He nuzzles closer in the crook of my jaw, and a powerful wave of emotion pulses through him. "I'll always come back for you, Al."
A tiny knock of caution drums in my chest, reminding me of Taelor, of Jeb's determination to go to London without me to be alone with her. But adrenaline surges even stronger. I touch his ear with my lips, tasting Alice's leftover tears on his skin. "Thank you."
He tightens his arms. His nose roots through the hair at my nape, like he's losing himself in the tangles. Our heartbeats thunder between us. Nervous shivers assault me until my limbs quake.
"Jeb," I whisper. He mutters something indecipherable, and my trembling hands clutch his neck.
A groan escapes his throat. I catch my breath as he clenches my hair in his fingers and draws back, eyes intense. He's about to lean into me when a cacophony of clicks and clatters interrupts.
We turn in circles. Thousands upon thousands of clams tunnel out from the sand. I clutch Jeb's hand, worried they're going to attack us for destroying their home. Instead, high-pitched cheers break loose.
Glancing over Jeb's shoulder, I gape. "Behind you."
Beside the clifflike wall, tons of shells pile one on top of another—tumbling in and out, over and over—to form a living escalator.
"We defeated their enemy," I whisper. "They want to help us."
Jeb doesn't hesitate. He takes my hand and leads me toward the ascending steps, snagging the backpack on the way. Together, we ride toward the sparkling black sands of the island.
Once we reach the top, I wave to the clams as they disappear into their ocean bed far below.
Jeb opens the backpack to check on our things. "Maybe I shouldn't be surprised that nothing's wet in here." He opens the pencil box before I can stop him. His jaw twitches. "What's this?"
"It's my… savings." Great. Not only did I throw myself at Taelor's boyfriend, but now I've lied about the money I stole from her.
Jeb looks up from counting it. There's something unreadable behind those thick lashes.
"You look different," he says, stashing the money back in the box and shaking wet droplets from his hair.
"Do I?" I rub the skin around my eyes. Are all my secrets blinking across my face like neon signs? "My makeup must be running all over the place."
"You're sparkly—everywhere."
"Oh. Probably just salt residue." I slip off his tux jacket, wring out the water, and hand it over.
"Huh," he says, still intent on me. "So… should we talk about it?" He shoves the jacket into the pack.
"About what?"
"What happened down there, between us."
Heat prickles my cheeks. He regrets it. Or maybe he's afraid I'll tell Taelor. Either way, I end up looking like a jerk. "It was the adrenaline. That's all. We were just happy to be alive. No worries. What happens in Wonderland stays in Wonderland, right?"
He doesn't even crack a smile. Just holds my gaze, then shakes his head. Lips drawn into a tight line, he puts all his attention into zipping up the backpack.
I want to believe he felt what I did… these things that I shouldn't be feeling at all. But how can that be true? I'm not the one he's going to be living with in another country.
I try to concentrate on something else, like how the water in my boots squishes between my toes, or how I have gaping rips the size of silver dollars all over my leggings.
"Where to now?" he asks.
It's possible he's talking about more than our physical destination, but I'm too scared to take a chance I'm wrong. Instead, I focus on our whereabouts.
The shore stretches as far as I can see… an endless, inky desert of shimmery soot. It's not at all what I expected the heart of Wonderland to look like, if that's what this really is. There's no flora or fauna anywhere except for a lone tree standing taller and wider than a redwood just a few feet ahead of us.
Familiarity lures me closer. Jeweled bark covers the entire tree, from the gnarled trunk to the branches that twist hundreds of feet into the air. It glimmers in the sun like a million white diamonds. At the end of each branch, rubies well up like liquid and dribble to the ground, as if the tree is bleeding jewels, the way elves do when their skin is pierced. With the black sands as a backdrop, the scene reminds me of my cricket mosaic back home—a beauty both mesmerizing and bizarre. I tamp down a surge of panic, remembering how the crickets seemed to be alive and kicking the last time I saw it on my wall.
"Winter's Heartbeat," Jeb says from beside me.
I nod. "You see the resemblance, too?"
His jaw spasms. "You've been here before."
I shake off my unease and step up to the tree, kicking a path through the fallen rubies. A spot at the base of the trunk pulses behind the diamond-bark like a heartbeat. With each thrum, it lights up in red lines the same shape as the birthmark on my ankle. The image sparks a memory of me and the winged boy, fuzzy yet unmistakable.
Jeb moves closer and I turn to hold his shoulder for balance, lifting my left leg to unlace my boot.
"What are you doing?"
"Following instructions," I answer, peeling off the boot and hiking up my leggings to expose my ankle. Jeb grips my elbow as I crouch down, pressing the maze on my ankle against the glowing lines of the tree.
A shock of static electricity leaps from me to the trunk; then a loud cracking breaks the hush. Jeb yanks me back as the trunk splits, the glittering bark rolling open like a scroll to expose a doorway. A soft red glow throbs and beckons from within.
"The pulsing heart of Wonderland," I whisper, shoving my foot into my boot again.
The red light reflects off Jeb's labret. "Okay, I'll buy that you came here as a kid and are having some kind of repressed memory flashes. But how is it you have a mark on your body that unlocks anything in this place?"
I hesitate, then tell him what I read about netherlings talking to bugs, and what I suspect about my family curse: that we share some characteristics with the creatures here, including freaky magical marks on our bodies.
Jeb stares at me, and I wonder how much more of this he can take without going crackers.
"You okay?" I ask, biting my lip.
Swallowing, he slides his fingers through his hair. "It's you I'm worried about. So how do we break this 'curse'?"
My heart bounces when he says "we." He's in this with me to the end. Not just because he's stuck here, but because he's the Jeb I grew up with. My Jeb. "I have to find someone inside. The one from my past… the one who used to bring me here."
Jeb frowns. "Okay. According to the flowers, this is also where the portals are. Right? The doors that will take us home?"
"Yeah," I answer, half expecting him to try to talk me into waiting outside while he checks things out. Instead, he holds me back only long enough to get out the flashlight, reposition the backpack, and take the lead. We descend a winding stairway through a dark tunnel that seems to spiral down forever.
"Don't look down," Jeb says.
Why do people say that? It only makes it impossible not to. My gaze sinks to the steps thudding beneath our boots. Bones, interlocked and bound with some kind of shimmery gold twine, make up the stairs. Most of the bones are deformed in size and shape. Others look humanoid. I press my palm over my mouth.
"What are they from?" Jeb whispers. "Ancestors? Human captives?"
I scan my foggy memories. "I don't remember ever learning about this…"
Jeb picks up his pace. We leap off the last step and duck through a curtain of vines. Instead of finding ourselves deep underground, a vista opens in front of us underneath a dark purple sky. The sun and the moon are twisted into one, the moon a blue tinge next to its brighter brother.
The combined light turns everything an ultraviolet hue. Plants of all kinds—bushes, flowers, trees, and ground cover—are neon beneath the blended rays: pinks, purples, greens, yellows, and oranges.
The paler shades of our clothes glow, too. No wonder I always felt so at home in Underland's activity center. On some subconscious level, it reminded me of this place.
A cool gust, thick with the scent of loam, greenery, and flowers, blows across us. Then I catch wind of something else—a fruity incense drifting our way. I know that smell. "Follow the smoke," I say, abandoning the path.
Jeb takes my hand and helps me over a bed of fluorescent marigolds. I squeeze his fingers in gratitude. My body is starting to feel the effects of our insane water ride. I have bumps and bruises everywhere.
As we lumber ahead, I can't stop thinking of the way he came back for me in the water, the way he wouldn't give up, the way he jumped into the mirror in my bedroom without a thought for his own safety. Maybe we should talk about what's going on between us, because something is definitely changing on my end. I run my tongue along the roof of my mouth nervously. I've been holding on to this secret so tightly for so long.
"Listen, Jeb." I gulp twice. "About what happened back there on the ocean floor. I—"
"Later." Glancing behind me, he catches my shoulders. "We have company."
He forces me to duck as a glowing cloud swoops over us, glimmering like fireflies.
"It's her!" a tiny voice squeals over the hum of many wings. "It is!"
A swarm of humanoid creatures the size of grasshoppers and the color of lima beans hovers around us. They're all females, naked with glittery scales that curve around their breasts and torsos in swirling designs. Their pointed ears and flowing hair sparkle, and their eyes are bulbous and metallic like a dragonfly's, as if they're wearing copper sunglasses. Wings flutter next to my cheek, milky white and furred with something resembling dandelion fuzz.
One of them gets close enough to pat Jeb's temple, her palms no bigger than a ladybug's body. "I found him. He's my prize!"
"Mine!" three others screech, tunneling into his hair.
Jeb clenches his hands around the backpack's straps.
"No, sister sprites," one answers with a voice like a chime. She hovers in front of Jeb, as enthralled as the others. "Our master said they shall be in my keep."
The others grumble and pull back.
Suspended in midair, the tiny victor bows while flapping her wings. "I am Gossamer. I shall lead you to the one you seek." Her dragonfly eyes glimmer in my direction and brighten, as if she's angry. "To the one who seeks you." My stomach flips at her implication.
Then she turns to Jeb. "Elfin knight, do you wish for pleasure on your quest? I can provide it, if you so desire."
Rubbing his labret with his thumb, Jeb glances at me, adorably bewildered. "Um. No thanks. I'm good."
Giggling, the sprite flutters ahead, joining the others.
We follow our luminous guides into a thick forest, weaving through tall, neon grasses until we reach a clearing of lime green moss, bright yellow lichen, and glowing mushrooms. A circle of trees reaches overhead, branches stretched and twisted together to form a domed roof. Slivers of the purple sky break through, just enough to cast shadows.
Each of the sprites takes her place inside the canopy, dotting the branches like lit candles. Their luminance adds a soft, glowing haze to the surroundings. Gossamer motions for us to follow her to the middle of the clearing, where a giant ultraviolet-striped mushroom awaits, wreathed in a fragrant cloud.
An unmistakable sense of knowing curls through me. I recognize this place from my Alice nightmares. We're in the lair of the Caterpillar—the wisdom keeper of Wonderland.
"She doesn't look like anything special, my lord." Gossamer hovers over the thick smoke that cloaks the mushroom's cap, hiding whatever sits atop. "She's covered in mud and reeks of clams."
"That would be because she just drained the ocean, pet. Had to be a rather laborious feat, don't you think?"
My entire being shakes at the sound of that deep accent. Liquid, masculine, and sensual. It's him. My netherling guide. If only I could see past the smoke.
"Her apparel appears to be that of a scullery maid," Gossamer says, shooting me a disapproving glance. "Perhaps you should send her home and wait for another. Someone more acceptable."
"One who's naked shouldn't judge apparel," that familiar voice answers. "You well know that clothes do not the lady make."
Humbled, Gossamer joins the other sprites overhead. At last, the smoke clears, revealing a hookah pipe and the crow-size moth—black wings and luminous blue body—perched atop the mushroom like a butterfly on a petal.
It inhales smoke from the hose and releases plumes into the air. Some are shaped like birds, others like flowers. One of the vaporous designs pulls away to form a woman's head—like the carving in a cameo. As it slowly dissipates, it starts to look like a five-year-old girl. A five-year-old me…
"So good to see you again, little luv. How I've missed you."
Gasping, I fall to my knees. The Caterpillar and the moth and the winged guy. They are all one and the same. They have been all along…
"I've seen that bug," Jeb says. "In your car. On the mirror." He drops the backpack and grips my shoulders, trying to drag me to my feet. My legs won't cooperate.
"Tut-tut. You are never to bow to me, lovely Alyssa." The voice drifts from the moth's proboscis on gray puffs of smoke. His attention shifts to Jeb. "You, on the other hand, will bow to her."
Smoke streams toward Jeb and transforms into a net in midair, cloaking him. The weight brings him to his knees. A stick slices his kneecap where the hole gapes in his pants from the octobenus's tusk. Blood drizzles out.
"Aha! He's no elf. He's a mere mortal." The moth flaps his wings as if he's made some great discovery.
"A mortal man!" the sprites screech in voices as dulcet as tinkling bells. They plummet from the trees like radiant snowflakes, swarming around Jeb as he slashes at his smoky restraints. The sprites knock the knife from his hand, then wriggle through the net, covering him like ants on a sugar cube.
I leap up to fend them off. "Get away!"
"Oh, don't stop the fun," the moth croons in my direction. "We won't break your toy soldier."
I grab the knife and try the scissor attachment on the net, but the ropes keep disappearing in my hands. I'm so preoccupied, I almost miss the transformation happening atop the mushroom. The moth laughs, and I look up just in time to see his wings fold over his body. The satiny appendages expand to the size of an angel's wings, then swoop open to reveal the guy from my mirror's broken reflection—the one from my memories—all grown up.
The knife slips from my hand. I'm mentally trapped between the past and present.
He's close to Jeb's height and age. He wears a black leather suit with utilitarian boots and lounges on the mushroom's cap with the hookah's hose perched elegantly between two fingers, ankles crossed. Weathered pants cover his toned legs. He's lankier than Jeb but in great shape. His jacket, unzipped almost to his abdomen, reveals a smooth chest, milky white like his clean-shaved chin.
The sprites steal our knife and abandon us to rush to their master. They preen his hair and smooth his clothes, cooing and laughing.
No wonder Persephone's movie poster always seemed so familiar. My netherling companion grew up to look just like the hero, except his shoulder-length hair is blue and glowing, and he wears a red satin half mask. Other than that, he's the spitting image: porcelain-pale skin, eyes as black as the makeup lining them, lips full and dark.
With the gray smog swirling around his sooty wings, he also reminds me of Jenara's window display: a dark angel.
Although he's more of a devil.
I know, because my childhood memories return in a crashing wave—slamming me with the name I haven't spoken in eleven years.
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