Cakes were great until they tasted like skunk butt. I spat out the cake and started wiping at my tongue. The taste wouldnât go away. The dangling cakes did, though. They vanished like popping bubbles as skunks came marching in, two by two, to start humping.
I woke with a gasp and sat straight up in my bed.
âGood morning, beautiful. Your prince has returned.â
The prince in question was lying like a starfish on my pillow, pointy side up.
âPiepen, where are your clothes? And what are you doing here? You have a new home. Go back to it.â
His little face scrunched up in a scowl, and he gestured at his naked self.
âI flew all night so you could wake up to this, and you start in on me as soon as you open your eyes. Woman, learn to be grateful.â
I raised my hand to flick him away. He squealed and rolled off the pillow.
âOkay, Okay,â he said, lifting his hands. âI can see your hormones are swinging hard. Maybe youâll change your mind when you see what I brought you.â
He flew to the window, which was partially open, and lifted a bag from the floor. It weighed him down so much he could barely fly up to the bed. He made it and collapsed panting.
âDid you come in through my window?â I asked.
âOf course, my Juliette.â
I needed to check my windows better before bed. I didnât remember leaving it open.
âYou are not my Romeo, Piepen. And I canât accept any gifts from you.â
âWell, itâs not really for you. Go ahead and open it. See for yourself.â
I loosened the cord on the cloth sack and stared down at a matching set of manual breast pumps.
âFor the baby, when your milk comes in.â He smacked his lips and stroked himself. âThe baby and I are going to eat like kings.â
Dropping the string, I glared at Piepen.
âI have exercised an incredible amount of patience with you, Piepen. But that ends now. Get your prepubescent butt out the window and back into your own bed immediately, or I will drive you to Meganâs house and feed you to Elbner. Am I clear?â
âYou seem tense. Maybe I should rub yourââ
âContinue speaking and die, brownie,â I said.
Piepen paled and escaped into the predawn light. I growled, got out of bed, and slammed the window closed, this time making sure to turn the lock.
Too angry to sleep, I went to the bathroom and turned on the shower. While the water warmed, I stripped out of my warm pjâs, grateful Iâd been wearing my old ones again. Turning to place them on the counter, I blinked at my reflection. My emaciated self was back. Sort of. I didnât look as wasted as I had a few days ago. Still boney, though. Only now, I had a dumb glowing strip down my middle.
I leaned toward the mirror, wondering what the heck was going on. Why was I seeing myself like this? Was it because everyone kept telling me there was something wrong with me?
They were getting into my head. Squaring my shoulders, I looked at myself in the mirror.
âYou are not sick or dying, Eliana Barchim. You are stronger than them all.â
I showered quickly and got dressed for the day, noting that my clothes fit me just fine. Everyone was crazy.
The faint sounds of groaning reached my ears a moment before the low beat of music drowned it out. I grabbed my phone to check the time and saw it wasnât even six yet. I was about to toss it to my bed to go pound on Momâs door when the phone started to ring. I saw Meganâs name, recalled the text I sent her last night about Mom being free but not leaving, and quickly answered.
âWhat do you mean sheâs not leaving?â she asked. âDoes she have a choice?â
âApparently she does now,â I said.
âWhat does that mean?â
âAdira thinks she is seeing a positive change in me with my mom being present. She also thinks I look healthier. I donât look healthier; I look angrier. The Council obviously canât tell the difference. I think theyâre confusing me with you.â
Megan laughed.
âGive them hell, then,â she said.
âOh, I plan to.â
âSo, other than your mom staying, how are things back home?â
My stomach dipped as I thought of Ashlynâs disappearance.
âNot too bad,â I said quickly. âI found some brownies who were willing to take Piepen in. He was a little upset, but I think heâs adjusting. Iâm planning on visiting him later today. And, Elbner is making great progress on your house. For being such a grumpy, unkempt thing, he sure has that place looking nice. Heâs even started scraping the loose paint off the outside.â
âWow. Iâm impressed,â she said. âHe knows that itâs winter, though, right?â
âIt doesnât seem to bother him.â
âOther than that, anything new?â
âNothing worth talking about,â I said quickly, thinking of Ashlyn again. âHow about you? Is it true that a druid was involved in the deaths?â
âYes. That would be Zayn. Heâs not wicked, though. That much I could sense.â
âBe careful around him, Megan. Itâs not safe to trust druids.â
âItâs not safe to trust most of us.â
âIsnât that the truth.â
We talked a bit about New York before I had to leave so I could make it to the Academy on time. I didnât care about classes as much as I cared about looking for the druids and getting answers about Ashlyn.
However, there was no sign of them in the pool bathroom before school or in any of the halls. I struggled to behave normally as I waited for time to move so I could get to Self-Discovery.
Fenris sat in his usual seat, the room once again empty except for us.
âAny luck finding the druids?â I asked, sliding into my seat.
âNothing yet, but Iâve been putting the word out that Iâm looking for them. Quietly, as promised.â
I sat back in my seat and stared at the clock. Where was Ashlyn? Was she safe? Was she running out of time? Was it already too late?
âYou okay?â Fenris asked softly.
âNot really.â I scrubbed a hand over my face and turned my thoughts to an annoyance Fenris could help me with. âPiepen crawled through my window at dawn, turning a really good dream into a nightmare.â
âWhat was the dream?â
I blushed a little.
âI was eating cake like a pig. It was so good, though. I love that dream, and he wrecked it with his nasty lust smell.â
Fenrisâs grin widened.
âItâs not funny. I woke up to him propositioning me. And thatâs not the worst of it. He brought me breast pumps, Fenris. He still thinks Iâm pregnant. What do I need to do to get through to him that Iâm not now or ever will be his baby mama?â
Fenris smoothed a hand over his mouth in an effort to stop his erupting laughter.
Sitting there with him, having a ânormalâ conversation, I realized something had changed. His scent. I breathed it in, trying to figure out what was different. It still smelled sweet and spicy, reminding me of my cake dreams, but it wasnât as overpowering. Had he found a way to control it to make things easier on me?
âWeâll pay Piepen another visit after school and talk to him,â Fenris said, having reined in his humor. âIf heâs not reasonable, maybe his new guardians will be. Itâs not safe for him to be wandering anywhere outside of the marshes. His new family will help convince him of that.â
I had my doubts theyâd be able to contain Piepenâs infatuation.
âHe needs a girlfriend. Big time.â
âThinking about playing brownie matchmaker?â
âIf it keeps him where he should be and not creeping into my windows at night, yes. I donât even know how he got in. I could have sworn I checked all the windows.â
âYou know better than that,â Fenris said. âWeâre all taught how to sneak into human homes from a young age. A simple window lock wouldnât keep the majority of the residents in our fine town out of your home.â
âPerfect. Now I have another reason to talk to the druids. I need warding spells on my windows.â
âIâm surprised you donât have them already.â
âNot many people would have the jingle bells to break into the Quillsâ home.â
He laughed.
âI think you mean balls.â
âYou say it your way; Iâll say it mine.â
With a grin, he leaned back in his chair.
âSo what do we do today to get LuAnn all excited that weâre making progress?â
âNothing, preferably. I have enough drama in my life right now. No need to add to it.â
âI donât know about that. If we do nothing, theyâll think weâre relapsing and push harder. If we give them a little more, theyâll leave us alone.â
âHa. They might leave you alone, but not me.â
He raised a brow as if to say, what exactly did they do?
âOkay fine. They were treating me like Iâd won the human lottery.â
âSee. Perfect.â He turned in his chair and patted his lap. âLetâs do a brownie check again.â
I wrinkled my nose but dutifully got up and went to Fenris. Instead of nudging me to stand between his legs, he pulled me into his lap and buried his nose between my boobs just as the door opened.
This time, LuAnn didnât speak. At least, I think it was LuAnn. The door closed before I could turn my head and look.
Fenris inhaled deeply, sending a shiver through me.
âDo you have to be right up in there to smell it?â I asked, not moving.
âYep,â came his muffled reply.
I rolled my eyes and held onto his shoulders as he continued to breathe in whatever he was smelling. Finally, he lifted his head.
âYour scent is getting stronger,â he said. âItâs helping to overpower Piepenâs, but I donât think his is getting any weaker. Did you try the lemon? I couldnât smell any lingering hint of citrus.â
âNo. I forgot.â
He said nothing, and I realized how close we were. And that I was still on his very warm lap. It was comfortable. Cozy.
My pulse picked up speed, and I inhaled slowly, noting the increased scent of his lust. My hunger lazily stretched.
âIt would be better if I didnât sit on your lap anymore,â I said, removing my hands from his shoulders.
âBetter for who?â he asked, not yet releasing his hold on my waist.
âYou, Fenris. I donât think I could forgive myself if I hurt you after everything youâve done to help me.â
A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.
âYou havenât hurt me yet.â
âI have lost control, though.â
âAre you saying I make you want to lose control?â He playfully wiggled his eyebrows.
âWhy do you have to turn everything into an innuendo?â
âBecause youâre pretty when you blush.â
He finally released me, and I quickly returned to my seat.
âSo tell me about your cake dreams,â he said.
I rolled my eyes and started talking.
Without Fenris to distract me with conversation, I dwelled on Ashlyn, Megan, Mom, and Adira for the rest of the day. Ashlyn was gone because of a spell I asked the druids to cast. If something bad happened to her, not only would it tear me apart, but it would make me wicked. Which would mean one stupid mistake could cost me two of my friends. Oh, I knew Megan wouldnât hold it against me, but her fury would.
Then Iâd be on my own to deal with Mom and Adira. Well, not alone, exactly.
From the driverâs seat of my car, I watched Fenris jog from the exit and wave at me. A moment later, he got in. I still wasnât sure how heâd talked me into letting him come with me to feed Elbner then look for the druids around town.
âReady to dodge a few shoes?â he asked.
âIf you stay in the car, Elbner probably wonât throw any.â
I could tell by Fenrisâs grin that he wasnât going to stay in the car.
âSo I might have some good news,â he said as I backed out of my spot. âI got a text from an unknown number. Itâs an address. Most likely a druidâs address. Not sure if itâll be one of the three youâre looking for, though.â
âItâs okay. Something is better than nothing.â
âTrue. Now about those cakes. Which one is your favorite to eat?â
I rolled my eyes at his obsession with my cake dreams and started discussing the pros and cons of each of the flavors Iâd tasted in my dreams.
âIt sounds like youâre torn between the spice cake and the lava cake,â he said.
âThe Death by Chocolate is pretty tempting, too.â
âYouâll have to let me know if you start dreaming of other flavors.â
I glanced at him, wondering why he cared.
He shrugged slightly.
âMaybe thereâs a relationship between whatâs going on in your life and what youâre dreaming about.â
I reached Meganâs house before I could figure out how something that tasted as amazing as lava cake could possibly be related to the poo-show that was my current life.
Elbner was outside in all of his ornery glory when I pulled into the driveway. The vines that had been clinging to the front of the house were gone as was the loose paint. The goblin looked up from where he was filling cracks in the foundation with foam and watched me park by the back door. Megan had been smart to send him to her home. Not only was her house looking great, but I bet it would be warmer now too. However, as Elbner continued to scowl at my car, I wondered what sheâd do with the little man when she returned. The goblinâs personality was far from pleasant.
I warned Fenris to stay in the car then went inside to make Elbner his daily meal. When I reemerged, I saw Elbner standing next to the car, glaring through the window at Fenris, who was grinning like a madman.
âIs there anything else you need, Elbner?â I asked. âPaint? Cleaning supplies? A warmer coat?â
âNo. Elbner needs nothing but the mongrel gone.â
âAll right. Iâll get him out of here. See you tomorrow.â
I got in and backed out of the driveway without making eye contact with the angry goblin.
âDid you have to grin at him like that?â I asked once we were on the road.
âYep. He threw a shoe at me, and it bounced off the glass. It was hilarious.â
I shook my head at Fenris and followed the road back into town. He directed me to the address, and we parked in front of a very standard looking ranch home.
âYou can stay here,â I said, reaching for the door. âThis will only take a minute.â
He followed me out of the car.
âLike Iâm going to let you walk up to a strange house alone. Youâre not the only thrill-seeker in this relationship. They might have candy.â
I snorted.
âI highly doubt whoever lives here is stupid enough to try luring anyone in with candy. Weâre the predators.â
He flashed a toothy grin.
âItâs cool hearing you say that.â
I rolled my eyes and knocked on the door.
âIâm very aware of what I am,â I said softly. âIâm just choosing to be who I am if that makes sense.â
âIt does to me.â
The door opened, and a man a few years older than us stared at us.
âCan I help you?â he asked.
âIâm looking for Meg, Anne, and Lauv. Are any of them here?â
âNope. Anne and her friends went out camping. Winter solstice and all that. I hated that shit when I was their age. Itâs fucking cold in a tent.â
âI hear you,â Fenris said.
âDo you know where they are?â I asked.
âNope. But Anne has her phone. You can call her.â
I gave him a sheepish look.
âI would, but I donât have her number.â Suspicion crept into his gaze. âI swear she knows me. And I really need to talk to her.â
âAbout what?â
I struggled to think of something quickly.
âSpell work,â Fenris said. âThe Academy kind. Maybe you could pass on a message to her?â
The man nodded and pulled out his phone.
âSure.â
âTell her that Eliana needs help finding some missing spell ingredients. And Iâm running out of time.â
I didnât know what else to say without tipping my hand that something was wrong. So I gave him my number and just had him ask her to call me.
âGot it,â he said. âIâm sure youâll hear from her soon.â
âThanks.â
Walking away from the door, I noticed Fenrisâs unsmiling expression.
âYou okay?â I asked.
âI wished you would have let me give him my phone number.â
âWhy? Iâm the one who needs to talk to her.â
âYeah, but now some random guy has your number.â
I laughed.
âIâm pretty sure he already forgot it.
Fenris shook his head. âIâm just as sure heâs going to be messaging tomorrow to see if Anne got back to you. Itâll be a conversation opener. Just wait and see.â
âYouâre so wrong.â
We both got into the car.
âWant to bet on it?â
âSure. If he doesnât message me, Iâm off the hook for hugs.â
Fenris actually winced, then grinned.
âOkay. And if Iâm right, the daily hugs double.â
âFine. Itâs a deal.â
âReady to get rid of your last lover boy before I have to help you with this new one?â
I gave Fenris a dirty look then headed for the marshes. While I knew Piepenâs infatuation was due to his age and nature, I couldnât help but feel a little guilt over my part in it. Would Piepen be so obsessed if I hadnât accidentally fed from him?
Probably.
The marshes were quiet when we parked, but I wasnât fooled. Piepen was out there somewhere.
âYou sure you want to say goodbye to all of this?â Fenris asked, gesturing to the reeds. âThere could be a nice little home out there somewhere for you and the baby.â
âGet out and help me like you promised.â
He grinned and left the car with me. Neither of us said anything as we stood in the parking lot. Thankfully Piepen didnât leave us waiting long.
With a squeal that sounded like my name, the small brownie whoâd marked me came flying out of the reeds. I barely had time to register that he was aimed to land right on my face before Fenris stepped between us.
I heard Piepenâs outraged shout when he realized he was hugging the wrong person.
âNo one stands between me and my woman,â Piepen yelled.
âAbout that,â Fenris said. âI think we need to have a man to man talk.â
Piepen shot up over Fenrisâs shoulder and looked at me.
âWhy did you bring him?â he demanded.
âBecause I needed help,â I said.
Fenris turned and held up a hand.
âWould you mind waiting in the car?â he asked.
I retreated into the lingering warmth of the vehicle and watched Fenris lead Piepen to the edge of the marsh. He spoke quietly for a while. Piepen stopped flying and perched on a cattail stalk, his wings dropping behind him as he looked down at his hands. Then his dejected gaze flew to Fenrisâs and his wings started to perk up again.
As I watched, more brownies appeared in the stalks. All males from the looks of them. All of them raptly listening to whatever Fenris was saying.
My curiosity got the better of me, and I rolled down the passenger window a crack.
âDesperation has its own scent. Females can detect it even if their sense of smell isnât evolved like mine. It turns them off in a big way. If you want to win a woman over, you have to get rid of the desperation.â
âHow?â Piepen asked.
âYouâre not going to like the answer,â Fenris said.
âTell me. Iâll do whatever it takes.â
âYou need to win over another woman.â
Piepen looked over at me. I could see the longing in his gaze and wanted to hide. When he turned back to Fenris, he looked determined.
âFor Eliana, Iâll do it. Sheâs a goddess.â
âRemember, you have to let a woman come to you, not the other way around. It wonât be easy. Itâll take a lot of time and a lot of patience.â
âI understand.â Piepen held out his tiny hand to Fenris. âThank you for your advice.â
Fenris shook his tiny hand then headed for the car, a slight smile tugging at his lips. When he got in, he rolled up his window and winked at me.
As I started the car, I glanced at Piepen, who was watching me. The little guy nodded in my direction then flew away.
âDid you just encourage him to keep harassing me?â I asked.
âHe thinks thatâs what I did,â Fenris said. âBut what I really just convinced him to do is find another girl. Heâll be married with a baby on the way before he figures out what happened.â
I should have felt bad for Piepen, but my relief was too consuming.
âThank you,â I said. âFor your help with Piepen and the druids. Do you want me to drop you off at your cabin?â
âNah, the Roost is fine. Iâve been avoiding the girls too much, and theyâre complaining to my dad.â
âYou mean hugging me today wonât be enough to keep him happy?â
âHugging doesnât cut it in my world,â he said.
âRight. The mate run.â
âYep.â
He started tapping his leg, an indication weâd touched on an uncomfortable subject. I didnât know what else to talk about, though, so the rest of the ride passed in an awkward silence. When I pulled in front of the Roost, he immediately got out but then leaned down to look at me.
âThanks for the ride and the distraction. See you tomorrow.â
âYep. Tomorrow.â
He closed the door and walked into the Roost without a single comment or backward glance.
Worried, I sat there for a moment before starting home. Fenris didnât do silence, and he never forgot to flash his flirting smile and try to talk me into joining his herd at the Roost. Was his delayed mate run really bothering him that much? I felt bad for him and wished there was something I could do. Sighing, I added it to my list of things to try to fix.
Mom was waiting for me in the kitchen when I walked through the door.
âI was just about to call you,â she said, standing.
âDid they find Ashlyn?â
âNot that Iâve heard. Iâm sure sheâll be fine.â
My steps slowed as I noted her glittery, floor-length dress and short white fur coat.
âAre you going out?â I asked.
âSince weâve rid ourselves of the useless pretext of partaking in human meals, I thought weâd go to the Roost. Back in my day, it was called the Fledgling. Dumb name. No one wanted to go there. Mrs. Quill said itâs changed drastically since then and that everyone your age spends their spare time there. Iâm eager to see that for myself.â
âItâs a teens-only place,â I said. âExcept for the staff.â
âDonât you worry about that,â she said with a wave. âI already cleared it with Adira and swore I wouldnât feed while out of the house. This is just for a look so I can see where Adira has you spending your time.â
That she and Adira both were okay with this meant they were up to something. What, though? Probably to get me to feed. Everything revolved around that with them.
Mom watched me expectantly, and I smiled, already knowing this plan of theirs would backfire spectacularly.
âYou know what? Sure. Letâs go to the Roost so you can see the wild nightlife of the young and imprisoned. Youâll love it.â
I turned around and went to my car, opening the door for Mom.
She smiled and patted my cheek before getting in. I hurried to join her and got her talking about New York and all her amazing parties during the short drive. Her amazingly high-end parties.
âHere we are,â I said, parking on the sidewalk almost a block away.
Mom leaned forward to look up at the neon sign in the distance.
âThe signâs a little tacky, I know, but it gets better inside,â I said.
She didnât say a word as she got out and followed me down the sidewalk.
âItâs usually not this packed,â I said. âMost of the time I can park by the door. There must be a decent crowd tonight.â
When I parked by the door, it was because I normally arrived early enough to avoid the late crowd. Iâd probably go to hell for the way I was bending the truth, but at the moment, I didnât care.
Music floated on the air and became blaringly loud once I opened the doors. Two sirens were on the stage already, singing for a crowd of maybe twenty, which included Fenris and his girls. None of the humans were here yet, so I headed for the back booth and slid in.
âDonât lean back against the seat,â I said. âIt might be a little grimy. They donât clean very well in here.â
Despite her best efforts to hide it, Momâs horror was showing as her gaze swept the space.
âAnd if you have to go to the bathroom, check the bowl before you hover. Iâve had as much as I can stand with brownies,â I said as if the two topics were related.
The horror in her eyes grew.
âDo you want something to drink?â I asked. âI can run upstairs to get it.â
âUpstairs?â
âYeah, you didnât see it when we came in? Thereâs a staircase over there that leads up to the loft and the bar. Thereâs not a lot of sitting room, but itâs a great place to watch the dancers.â
Her gaze drifted to the dance floor again.
âThis is a crowd?â
I frowned, doing my best impersonation of confusion.
âDonât you like it?â I asked.
She made a sound of disgust. âItâs no wonder youâre starving. Thereâs nothing here. This is no feeding ground for a creature of your distinction.â
She got out of the booth and motioned for me to join her.
âThat woman is a menace,â she said. âThis place is a complete waste of your time.â
She started for the door, and I got up to follow her, more than a little satisfied Iâd won this round.
A tingle of awareness raced over my neck before I reached the door, and I turned to see Fenris watching me.
With a smile, I waved and pushed the door open only to walk into the last person I wanted to face.
Eras.