The ten-minute drive to Ashlynâs was just long enough for me to cool off a little so I could knock on her door with my usual smile. She answered almost right away.
âHey, Eliana. I told your mom I was fine bringing the jacket to you. Come in.â She waved me inside as she stepped back.
âI donât mind. I needed to get out of the house.â
Ashlyn offered me a sheepish smile and closed the door behind me.
âSame,â she admitted. âI thought going to school would help the boredom, but I feel just as confined.â
I wanted to smack myself.
âIâm so sorry, Ashlyn. I wasnât thinking.â
âItâs okay. Iâm guessing thereâs a pretty good reason for me to not want to visit the Quills if you needed to get out of the house.â
She gestured to the living room.
âWant to sit and talk for a bit?â
I took a step then hesitated, looking at her again.
âI swear Iâm fine now,â she said, reading my hesitation. âSkipping class yesterday was just precautionary. That, and I needed a little time, you know?â She glanced at the pictures on her wall. The smiling faces of her family made me hurt for her.
âIâd love to sit and talk for a while,â I said, really meaning it.
âSo what drove you out of your house?â she asked, leading the way.
âMy mom. I woke up with two boys in my bed. Naked. What kind of mom does that?â
Ashlyn grinned and sat across from me on the couch.
âA succubus mom, I would guess. What was your reaction?â
âAbout a two-second sprint from my bed. I think I accidentally stepped on one of them. His privates, based on his pained breathing.â
She laughed, and I couldnât help but smile a little. Then, my humor faded.
âI hate living here,â I said softly.
She grew quiet and looked around the room.
âMe too,â she admitted. âIâd do anything to get out of here. Anything but give up who I am.â
The only way out of Uttira for a human was a mind wipe. Since Ashlyn had been born here, she wouldnât be left with anything. Not even her name.
âWe have more in common than I thought,â I said. âI hate being here, but in order to leave, I would need to stop being who I am, too.â
âSo what are you going to do?â
I leaned back into my chair and considered my options.
âUp until now, Iâve followed their rules, to an extent. I donât like makeup, but I wore it to get them to ease off of other things. I donât like revealing clothes, but I wore those, also to keep the peace. Iâm done compromising, but I donât know what that means for me. Fenris said not to let Adira see sheâs made me sweat, and I agree with that. But, I think I need to show her that sheâs made me angry. Iâm no Megan. While I know I wonât make Adira quake in her frost giant shoes, Iâve seen the way Adira avoids my mom. If Iâm angry, I think my mom will be angry. And Adira and the rest of the Council donât want my mom angry.â
âWhat about your mom? Sheâs the one who tucked you in with two boys.â
I shook my head.
âI donât know. The Council is keeping her here. Iâm hoping that Megan will clear Momâs name so she can leave.â
Even as I said it, I had my doubts. Would Mom leave? She kept saying how much she liked being here. The Council might have let a beast in that they wonât be able to get out.
âWhat about you?â I asked. âWhat are you going to do?â
âThe only thing I can do. Wait until I turn eighteen so I can be bound. Itâs not ideal, but at least Iâll have a chance at leaving this place then. Even if itâs only for Council errands.â
I could feel her energy. The despondence.
âI donât think this is the conversation you had in mind,â I said.
She gave me a rueful smile.
âAny conversation is better than sitting in a quiet house with nothing to do.â
I stood.
âLetâs go do something.â
âLike what?â
âIâm out of chocolate, thanks to my mom. Letâs go to the Threadbare Trader and see if Mags has anything we can use to make some dessert. I had an amazing dream about cakes last night, and now I kind of want the real thing.â
We both grabbed our jackets, and I drove us to the shop. Mittens lined the walls, and Mags sat in her usual place behind the counter. She looked up from what she was knitting and greeted me with a smile.
âHavenât seen you in a while, Eliana. And whoâs with you?â
âThis is Ashlyn.â
âWhat kinds of mittens are you two looking for?â
Mags sold banned foods to the teens of Uttira. For the adults and any humans stupid enough to wander into this place on their own, she sold mittens. Overpriced and very soft mittens.
âNo mittens. I want enough chocolate to make a cake, please,â I said, not caring that I wasnât playing along with her usual banter.
Her gaze flicked to Ashlyn then back to me.
âYouâre getting bolder. You might bring the wrong person with you one of these days. What will you do then?â
âFind another way to get chocolate.â
She gave me a hard look.
âIâm sold out. Not sure if Iâll get any more in. The mitten business is pretty lucrative on its own.â
I leaned over the counter toward her.
âIâve been coming here for three years, and in those three years, every time you said youâre out, you magically manage to find just enough for the right price. Iâm very tired of being manipulated by adults. If you have any chocolate, get it and sell it to me for a fair price.â
She stood and left the room.
âUh, are you okay?â Ashlyn asked.
I turned toward her, and she gave me an odd look.
âIâm fine. Why?â
âYour eyes. Theyâre black. Iâm trying to figure out if youâre angry or hungry. You know, should I run, or should I hide?â
I smiled a little and blinked. My vision lost some of its focus.
âYou donât need to do either. Iâm not that kind of hungry, and all my anger is reserved for the people waiting at home.â
Mags emerged from the back, looking more irritable than usual.
âHereâs the chocolate. Ten dollars.â
Ten dollars was far less than Iâd ever paid before, but I quickly handed her the money and motioned Ashlyn to the exit.
âDonât come back soon,â Mags said just before the door closed behind us.
âIs she always so friendly?â Ashlyn asked on the way back to the car.
âPretty much. She usually says she looks forward to seeing me again, though. By the way, I have a lot of mittens if you ever need to borrow a pair.â
âA lot of mittens but only one coat?â
âIf I asked for another one, Adira would pick it out for me.â
âAnd thatâs bad?â
âFor me, yes. You saw what Iâve been wearing to school this week. My next jacket would have probably been a see-through raincoat.â
âYou should ask Mrs. Quill to take you shopping again.â
I recalled the shopping trip weâd taken with Ashlyn to cheer her up after her uncle died. It had been Ashlynâs first trip out of UttiraâCouncil sanctioned, of courseâand sheâd loved it for the most part. So had I.
âI donât think she would,â I said, opening my door.
âWhy not?â
I buckled and started the car as she did the same.
âTheyâre playing games again like they did with Megan. Only now, Iâm their pet project.â
âUh-oh.â
âYeah. So, while I could ask for another fun shopping trip, I doubt Iâd like what it would cost me. Did Eugene tell you that Adira invited him to the Quills for dinner so I could feed on him?â
âWhat? No.â
My grip on the steering wheel tightened.
âI refused, of course.â
âOf course,â she echoed.
âAnd Adira said I would regret my decision. Now, the Council supposedly suspects my mom of killing trolls because sheâs pregnant and hungry. In reality, I think they brought her here to punish me. The jokes on them, though. I know my mom, and she wonât put up with Adiraâs manipulation games much longer.â
âSo Adira brought your mom here just because you wouldnât feed on Eugene? That seems a little extreme.â
âShe brought my mom here because they think Iâm starving myself. That Iâm not eating enough.â
âDo you think thereâs anything to their concern?â she asked.
âNo. Why?â
She shrugged.
âJust say it,â I said. âYou know I wonât get mad.â
âHonestly, Iâm not sure how to put it into words without making it sound like Iâm criticizing you.â
âI know youâre not. Try. Maybe it will help me understand what they see.â
âWell, youâre not like the other succubus at school. Youâre small. Not just in size but your presence, too. The other girls can walk in and own a room. Even knowing the tricks of your kind, itâs hard not to look. With you, itâs easier.â
âNot that easy. You fell for it on Thursday.â
âTrue. But it was because I had my guard down. I wasnât looking for it with you. You donât tempt me now, and Iâm not sure you could if you tried. Itâs like you lack a spark.â
I considered what she was saying.
âAre you mad?â she asked.
âNo. Iâm trying to look at myself objectively. I think youâre right that Iâm missing the spark that they have. But I think itâs by choice, not starvation. I donât want to be like them and command a room with a look. If Iâm noticed, I want it to be like this,â I said, waving a hand between us. âSomething real.â
âI donât know, Eliana. Iâve overheard the other girls talk about how often they feed, and itâs a lot. They also get insanely hangry when they skip a meal. Even the guys are like that. You heard about Eras, right? Heâs going crazy because he went hungry for a night. How are you not hungry all the time like them?â
âI am hungry all the time. I just learned to control it.â
âIn the human world thatâs called anorexia, and itâs dangerous. Iâm not saying that Iâm siding with Adira or Mrs. Quill, just that you need to take a long look at yourself. Youâre hungry all the time and refusing to eat. Whatâs that really doing to you? Youâre one of the few friends I have here, and I donât want to lose you. Iâve lost enough.â
I knew I shouldnât, that it was dangerous, but I reached over and placed my hand on Ashlynâs and pulled some of the sorrow from her. The non-sexual energy didnât nourish me, but it did make me weirdly hungry for lava cake.
âIâm sorry for all that youâve gone through and the pain you still feel. I hope it fades in time and you find some true happiness.â Even as I said the words, I knew how impossible finding happiness would be here. Either she would spend her life alone, or she would bring another human into this hell with her. And I didnât see her as the type of person to do that.
She pulled her hand out from under mine.
âThank you. Iâm sure Iâll be fine.â
Was there any word used more falsely than the word fine?
âStill want to bake a dessert?â I asked as I parked in front of her house.
âAbsolutely. The brownies we made with Megan were amazing.â
The comment made me think of Piepen and how very not amazing he was.
âHow much do you know about brownies?â I asked. âThe ones with wings.â
She let us into the house and waited until I closed the door before answering.
âNot much. Theyâre one of the few creatures I havenât had to interact with. Mostly, they keep to themselves and stay hidden. Why?â
I thought of the glowing line on my belly and shrugged.
âMegan sent a brownie to me, and heâs more than I can deal with right now. I went to the marshes and asked if any family would take him in.â
âYou saw brownies at the marshes?â
âNo. I just stood there, talking to the marsh. But I know some of them heard me. There werenât any birds around but a lot of bird song. I gave them my phone number. I mean, I know some of the wingless ones have jobs in town, right? They should be able to call me.â
âThe ones that work in town donât go back to the marsh. Too dangerous. They could give away where the young ones with wings are hiding.â
Defeat kicked me hard in the ribs. Why couldnât anything go right for me?
Ashlyn must have seen something in my expression because her gaze turned sympathetic.
âMaybe we could try asking the new liaison for help.â
âDonât worry about it. Iâll figure something out after we get our chocolate fix.â
My phone started to ring before we even had the mixing bowls out. I glanced at the number and wrinkled my nose.
âYour mom?â Ashlyn asked.
âWorse. Adira.â
Ashlyn gave me a sympathetic look as I answered.
âWhy arenât you spending time with your mother?â Adira asked without greeting.
âBecause sheâs a hardened serial troll killer, of course.â
There was a beat of silence on the other end.
âYour new attitude is unappreciated. Did you retrieve your jacket?â
âThe one you made me give away? Yes, I have it again.â
âGood. Then go home.â
âNo.â
âI see.â
âNo, you donât. But I do. As soon as we hang up, youâre going to do something to try to get me to leave this house prematurely. However, it wonât work. Do you know why? Because Iâve already put up with as much as I can deal with today. Do what you need to do, but remember that Ashlynâs under Meganâs protection before you start handing out ultimatums in an attempt to get your way in whatever game youâre playing.â
I hung up the phone before she could answer.
âWhat do you think Adiraâs going to do?â Ashlyn asked, measuring out some flour. I started in on my recipe, too.
âItâs hard to tell with her. She never does anything that would be obvious, you know? I donât think you have anything to worry about, though.â
âI know. Iâm more worried about what sheâll do to you.â
âMy momâs already mad at Adira. I donât think Adira will rush to do anything to make her angrier. Sheâs not stupid.â
My phone started ringing before I managed to crack my eggs. Thinking it was Adira, I didnât rush to answer it. When I saw it was Momâs number, I frowned and said a wary hello.
âHey, baby. I wanted to apologize again for this morning. I know I messed up, and I promise I wonât surprise you with any meal options in the future.â
âThank you.â
âDid you get your jacket?â
âYes. Thank you for talking to Adira and getting my clothes back, too. I should have thanked you right away.â
âNonsense. You were upset. I understand. Do you think youâll be home soon?â
I looked at all the ingredients we had spread over the table.
âProbably not. Why?â
âI want to talk to you about something, and Iâd prefer to do it soon.â
I opened my mouth to ask if something was wrong with Dad when another thought occurred to me.
âAdira,â I said. âShe called you, didnât she?â
âShe did.â
âSheâs trying to manipulate me into leaving Ashlynâs to spend more time with you.â
âIs spending time with me a bad thing?â Mom asked.
Guilt hit me hard.
âMom, itâs not about you; itâs about Adira. She needs to stop trying to force me to do things.â
âShe told me youâre feeding on non-sexual energy, Eliana. Is that true?â
âYes, but not for food. I was just doing it to help people out.â
âYou need to come home now.â
I pulled the phone from my ear and stared at it in shock. My mom had just used a mom-voice on me. She never did that. Ever.
âRespectfully, I think itâs best if I donât come home for a while. I donât think either of us is in the right frame of mind for whatever talk you want to have.â
There was a beat of silence before she answered.
âYou might be right. Be careful, Eliana. You have no idea what youâre doing to yourself with these false feedings. Iâll see you at dinner.â
I hung up the phone with a shaky exhale. Adiraâs words from the last dinner she attended at the Quillsâ were starting to haunt me. Sheâd said I would regret my choice, and she was doing everything in her power to make that happen. A gut feeling told me that she was far from done.
âI really hate Adira,â I said to Ashlyn.
âYeah, it was a real dick move for her to call your mom. You okay?â
My phone buzzed with a text. Instead of answering it, I started cracking eggs into my lava cake batter and answered Ashlyn.
âNot really. Adira just made a huge mess for me, and Iâm not sure whatâll happen next.â
âNothing good, most likely.â
âYouâre probably right.â
I finished mixing my lava cake and got it into a pan. When I was wiping my hands, my phone buzzed again. Giving in, I checked the messages. Instead of being from Mom or Adira, they were from Megan.
Freedom is one phone call away. Get ready to say goodbye to mommy-dearest!
Sheâd sent a second one three minutes after that.
Everything okay?
Everything was most definitely not okay. Adira was using Mom to try to control me. And just then, I realized what that meant for me. Freedom was far from one phone call away. Even if the Council officially pardoned Mom, they wouldnât make her leave.
I needed to come up with a plan of my own before I lost myself in the aftermath.
Everything is fine, I sent back. See you soon, hopefully.
Putting aside my concerns for the future, I focused on the now.
Ashlyn and I made a mess of her kitchen and decimated her baking supplies, but managed to make three different dessert options.
âOh, these are so good,â Ashlyn said around a mouthful of warm brownie.
I shuddered.
âI donât think Iâll ever be able to eat a brownie again. Piepenâs scarred me for life.â Probably literally the way my luck was going.
âIâll take one for the team and eat all these myself. Howâs the lava cake?â
âGood.â And it was good. It just wasnât as good as my dream lava cake, which was a huge letdown.
âYouâre still thinking about your mom and Adira, arenât you?â
I set my fork down and sighed.
âYeah. Dealing with Adira is bad enough. Now sheâs trying to turn my mom against me.â
âYou know youâre welcome to stay here as long as youâd like. The threat of Meganâs retribution will be enough to keep Adira from doing anything too awful.â
As tempting as that would be, I knew I couldnât stay forever. Eventually my hunger would raise its head and put Ashlyn in danger.
âThank you,â I said. âBut avoiding everything wonât make my problems go away.â
With my container of lava cake in my hands, I entered the kitchen from the garage. Scents of grilled meat and vegetables filled the air. Mrs. Quill looked up from her place at the stove.
âDid you have a nice visit with Ashlyn?â she asked.
I stared at her for a second, wishing our lives were still at the point when I actually thought she cared.
âThe visit was fine until Adira called, trying to play her games again. I canât wait to be free of this place.â I put my cake in the fridge and started for the door.
âIâm sorry youâre hurting, Eliana,â Mrs. Quill said.
I waved and kept walking. Her sorrow didnât help anything. Her support would have, but heaven forbid she do anything against Adiraâs wishes.
From above, I could hear the thumping beat of muffled music. Resigned, I made my way to my bedroom and ignored the growing scent of lust. How many people did Mom have in Oanenâs room? I was no longer sure a professional cleaning would be enough. Heâd need to gut the space by the time he and Megan returned.
Another thought hit me hard. When he and Megan returned to Uttira, he likely wouldnât be coming back here. Heâd probably go live with Megan.
I wanted to groan. Was I going to be stuck with my mom forever?
Continuing past his room, I noticed the door to the entertainment space was open and looked in. Piepen flitted in the air, watching the TV raptly. His jerky movements, and the tiny glowing firework that exploded just in front of him, had me rolling my eyes. I would need to burn that couch when Piepen was gone.
I glanced at the TV then quickly hurried to my room. I should have known how Mom would keep an adolescent brownie entertained while she was busy. Thankfully, Piepenâs skunk scent was almost completely masked by what was seeping from Oanenâs room.
In the peace of my own space, I sighed and went to my closet to change for a dinner I didnât want to attend. Adira would expect it, though, even if she wasnât there. Based on her call, Mrs. Quill was giving her sister full reports of how much time I was spending in my momâs presence.
As if summoned by my thoughts, my mom knocked on my door and entered without waiting for a response.
âHey, baby. I thought I heard you come home.â
âNot sure how you can hear anything with your music so loud.â
Mom smiled.
âThe music sets the mood for the humans. You know that.â She tilted her head, watching me consider the dresses. âAre you going somewhere?â
âMrs. Quill is almost done with dinner. They expect me to change into something fittingly succubus.â
âI see. Thereâs no need for that anymore, though. I think it would be better if we stopped with the pretext of eating human food unless weâre using the experience as itâs meant to be used.â
I frowned at her, confused.
âItâs a form of foreplay, baby. Putting the fork in your mouth, licking it, swallowing what it provides. Itâs a phallic representation to your male companion.â
âAnd youâve just ruined eating for the rest of my life.â
âDonât be so dramatic. Human food is a tool, not nourishment. If youâre hungry, I have a buffet in my room. Why donât you come and sample a little? You might find something you like.â
âThanks, but Iâm not really in the mood for an orgy.â
She sighed and stood.
âFine, but Iâll leave my door open just in case you change your mind.â
âI wonât.â
Sheâd no sooner left than Piepen came buzzing in, his iridescent wings fluttering behind him.
âYouâre home!â he cried, zooming at me.
âStop.â
He halted midair, just shy of my hand.
âBaby, donât be like that,â he said. âI got what you need. Come here and let big P treat you right.â
âI think I just threw up in my mouth. Stop talking like that.â
âLike what? You donât want your baby daddy sweet-talking you?â
âBaby daddy? You are notââ
He zoomed over to my bed and landed face up on my pillow.
âYou know what you need? A ride. Hop on, mama,â he said, patting his tiny hips.
âI should sit on you and end my suffering, you annoying little P.â
âHey now,â he said, sitting up. âDonât be like that. Is the baby giving you trouble?â
I threw my hands in the air just as my phone started to ring. I grabbed it, thankful for any reason not to continue the conversation with Piepen.
âYeah, whatâs up?â I answered.
âEverything okay?â Megan asked.
Piepen chose that moment to start humping my pillow. I covered the phone to yell at him before answering her.
âNot really. I need to find Piepen a better home.â
Piepen squealed and started pleading with me to let him stay until the baby was born. I rolled my eyes.
âYou do what you need to do,â Megan said.
âThanks.â
Piepen came flying at me in all his naked glory.
âI gotta go,â I said quickly then hung up.
âNo, Piepen. Enough is enough. Get back to your drawer pillow and stay there, or Iâm going to put you in a cage. And for the last time, I am not pregnant with your baby or anyone elseâs. Iâm still a virgin, and so are you.â
I slammed my door on the way out of my room.