The Never King: Chapter 25
The Never King (Vicious Lost Boys Book 1)
Peter Panâs shirt smells like him. Like wild forest and heady nights.
I pull it closer to my torso to keep in some of my body heat while I follow him back through the woods.
When we emerge and the house comes into view, I pause for a second. Itâs the first Iâve really looked at the house from the front. Itâs massive, hugged on both sides by wild, tropical forest. Bright flowers dot the surrounding trees and several palms rise high above. All of the windows of the house are lit up, sending a golden glow into the descending night.
My mom said there was magic on the island. The illusions the twins cast were certainly magic, but now I know what my mom was really talking about. The lagoon, the swimming souls that looked like mermaids, and the house glowing with life.
I love it here, even though that feels like a leap considering Iâve barely been here at all.
Thereâs something about it that feels familiar, that feels like returning home after a long trip. A place to sigh with contentment.
Iâve never had that. Never in my entire life.
I follow Pan up the steps to the balcony and then into the loft. The giant tree in the center of the house is full of little fireflies.
âThere you are,â Vane says. âWhere the fuck have you been?â
Pan grumbles at him. âOut.â
Vane eyes me with his glittering violet eye. I canât tell what heâs thinking and Iâm usually so good at reading people. Maybe thatâs why heâs so damn frustrating. I canât get beyond his walls and see inside.
He is a puzzle box and I want to find the solution to break him open.
The twins come into the room. âTilly is on her way.â
Peter Pan snaps his fingers at Vane. âGet the rest of the Lost Boys into the house and out of sight. Bash and Kas, get the Darling some dry clothes and help get her ready.â
My heart leaps to my throat and blood rushes to my head, pounding against my ears. This is it. This is how it happens.
I donât want to lose my mind.
âDarling?â Kas stops in front of me. His hair is tied back again in a bun at the back of his head. Thereâs worry in his amber eyes.
âI donât want to do this.â
He frowns at me. âThe king gets what he wants.â
I gulp down air. âPlease, Kas.â
He slips his arm around my shoulders and guides me toward the bedroom.
Iâm shaking and numb.
This is how it happens. This is when it begins.
âWhy does she have to get into my head? Canât I just be like hypnotized or something? Donât you think that if any of us knew where it was, we would have remembered by now? Please, Kas.â I grab his hands, squeeze.
âI canât stop it, Win,â he says and tilts his head. âAnd you canât either.â
Bash comes into the room. âListen, Darling. You may be at risk of being knocked over by a stiff breeze, but in hereââhe ruffles my hairââyouâre stronger than you think. And youâre going to let our dear sister get into your head and youâre going to help us find Peter Panâs shadow. Okay? I believe that. I believe youâre different from every single Darling thatâs come before you.â
I swallow against the lump growing in my throat. âYou think so?â
âYeah.â He grins at me. âWe got to fuck you.â
Kas whacks him upside the back of the head and then Bash reaches over and does the same to his twin.
I want to help Pan.
I want to be the one that gets him his shadow.
But I donât want to lose my head doing it.
I have endured. Iâve endured the sickness of so-called magic potions that only made me vomit for days. Iâve endured blades cutting into my flesh, the blood collected to paint across my ceiling.
I have endured and I can endure this.
I can finally end this curse for all of us.
âOkay.â I nod and pull Peter Panâs shirt off. âI can do this.â
âThatâs right,â Kas says. âIâll go see if Cherry has some clean, dry clothes somewhere.â
When Kas is gone, Bash comes over to me and takes my hand in his. He fingers the bracelet around my wrist, spins it around my arm. âThis isnât just a regular bracelet.â
âI know. Itâs a kiss.â
âYes, but thereâs more.â He smiles down at me, voice raspy and low as he continues. âItâs imbued with magic. Itâll protect you. You have nothing to fear.â
I know he has magic. Maybe heâs telling the truth.
I give him a nod.
Unlike my mother and her mother and her motherâs mother, I can come out the other side of this intact.
Itâs going to be all right.
Cherry lends me a clean dress, but it sags on my shoulders so I fuss over it constantly so that my back isnât bared.
âDarling,â Pan calls.
I come out to the loft where he, the twins, and Vane are waiting. The rest of the house is silent.
âAre you ready?â Pan asks.
âI think so.â
There is the distinct sound of horse hooves on the cobblestones outside the house.
Bash goes to the window. âSheâs here.â
Even though Iâm the one whoâs supposed to be subjected to mental torture, I sense the twinsâ shifting energy. Theyâre nervous to see their sister.
As we wait for them to come up to the loft, I try not to fidget but fail. I am a ball of nerves too.
Their sister is a queen. A fae.
Iâm excited to meet her because of that but dreading what sheâs here to do.
When she comes up the stairs to the loft, I hold my breath.
And when she finally appears, I canât help but gasp.
Sheâs like a fairy straight out of a fairytale.
And she has wings. Large gossamer wings that arch from her back and flutter slowly beneath the light of the glowing lanterns. And when they catch the right lighting, they shimmer like the inside of an abalone shell.
Her dark hair is braided into several braids that are woven in and around a delicate golden crown where a single stone glitters in the center.
She has the twinsâ high, sharp cheekbones and thin, straight nose. But her face is heart-shaped where theirs is more angular.
Turning her gaze on me, I notice her irises are the same shimmery, shifting color of her wings.
Sheâs magnificent.
Sheâs more myth than Peter Pan himself.
I blink several times as if to double check that my vision isnât playing tricks on me.
âTilly,â Peter Pan says and comes over to her. âIâm happy to see you.â
She smiles up at him, but some of the light fades from her eyes and itâs the first hint that something is amiss between them.
Does Peter Pan know?
She holds out her hand to him, fingers bent. He reaches over, takes her hand and plants a kiss to her knuckles.
That pleases her. Almost like being kissed is a display of dominance and she likes being the dominant one.
I suppose Peter Pan is at her mercy. Sheâs the only one who can dig inside my head.
Then she turns her gaze on the twins flanking me and all of the pleasure bleeds from her face.
Now her expression is cold and distant.
âBrothers,â she says.
âDear sister,â Bash says.
âItâs nice to see you, Tilly,â Kas says.
She doesnât respond and I can tell the short conversation leaves both of the twins wanting.
âIs this the Darling?â she asks and cuts her gaze to me.
Itâs hard not to turn my face to the floor like a cowering idiot.
âHi.â
âHave these feral boys minded their manners?â
Vane snorts.
I try to ignore him. âYes. Theyâve been kind.â
Except for when they were calling me a whore and fucking me over the table.
Iâd take that over this any day.
In fact, Iâd prefer it over just about anything else.
I want to go back to that, when the only pursuit was my own pleasure.
âCome, have a seat.â She gestures to one of the chairs and I reluctantly make my way across the room to it and sit down.
I fold my hands into my lap to hide my trembling fingers. My skin is clammy and my knee is bouncing.
âThis shouldnât take more than a few minutes,â she says behind me and a creeping sense of dread crawls over my shoulders.
My heart is racing and my stomach is knotted up and I think I could vomit if given a bucket to do it in.
Tilly reaches out for my head and I flinch.
âItâs okay. Iâm just putting my hands here.â Her fingers sink into the threads of my hair so that they can press directly to my scalp. âReady?â
God no. Not at all.
What if there is no memory of the stolen shadow? What if all of this is for nothing and all of the Darling women have had their brains scrambled for nothing more than a wild goose chase?
âLetâs begin,â she says and blinding pain cracks through my skull.