The Never King: Chapter 30
The Never King (Vicious Lost Boys Book 1)
When I come up for air, Iâm screaming.
There are no waves. No wind. But weâre in water. This water is shallow and brackish and it takes me a second to recognize it as Emerald Pond in the park down the street from our old Victorian.
Iâm home.
Iâm home.
So why am I dreading it?
We trudge out of the water, me and Peter Pan and the Lost Boys.
Itâs dark here too and crickets and pond frogs chirp and croak in the night.
âThis way,â I say and move us to the sidewalk thatâll take us to the street.
Weâre all silent as we walk, soaking wet and on a mission. It takes us less than ten minutes to reach the Victorian. Somehow seeing my house with Pan and the boys makes one or both of them feel unreal.
Like they shouldnât exist in the same space.
We go up the cracked and crumbling front walk. I try the door and find it unlocked. Thatâs unlike my mother. She always remembers to lock the doors.
When I push the door in, it creaks on its hinges. The house is dark and quiet save for its normal settling, like old bones creaking.
âMom?â I call out.
Thereâs no answer.
We go down the hallway and the boys stay behind me.
My great grandmotherâs trunk is in the living room beneath the bay window.
Except when we reach the doorway, we find Mom there with a man shorter than me, and several more just like him. Heâs got a shock of dark hair on his head and big, wide-set eyes with pointed ears.
âBrownie,â Pan says on a growl.
âPan,â the little man says.
âWhy are you here?â Pan asks. There is a very clear edge of suspicion in his voice.
The Brownie steps forward. âTink didnât want you to be king and I dedicated my life to her.â
âBut how did you know it was here?â Pan takes another step.
Vane and the twins match his movements, flanking Pan.
âI always knew it was here,â the Brownie answers. âTo be fair, I thought youâd be dead by now. We all did.â
The others nod. There are seven of them in total.
âWhat do you plan to do with my shadow once you claim it? Not many can hold it.â
âThe twins could,â the Brownie says.
Pan goes rigid. âWhatâs Tilly have to say about that?â
âShe wants whatâs best for the island.â The Brownie rests his hand on the hilt of a blade strapped at his hip. âYou were a vicious king. You canât think we want you to return to that?â
I watch Panâs face for a reaction. I know he can be vicious. I watched him kill that Lost Boy for nothing more than flirting with me. But just how vicious is he?
Iâm not afraid of him, but maybe I should be.
Maybe jumping off that cliff was the least brave thing Iâve done in so many days.
âI wonât let you stop me,â Pan says.
âI wonât let you leave here with your shadow,â the Brownie says.
There is a quiet, still moment right before fighting breaks out.
Mom is wedged between the corner and the trunk, her arms wrapped around her knees.
I run to her as swords clash.
âMom? Are you okay?â
âWinnie? Oh, Winnie!â She unfolds herself and wraps her arms around me. âIâm so glad youâre back.â
âAre you okay?â
âYes, Iâm fine. Iâm fine.â
I look over my shoulder to see Vaneâs hands on either side of a Brownieâs head. He twists violently and the Brownieâs neck snaps.
My stomach rolls.
âMom, do you know of a hidden compartment in great-grandmotherâs chest?â
âNo. Why?â
I unlatch it and pop the lid open. It smells like itâs from another century and the paper lining is now brittle and coming off in flakes. Weâve used it to store old linens and blankets, and one photo album thatâs only a third full.
Someone screams behind us. I donât think itâs the boys.
I yank out the blankets, the sheets, and then run my hand along the trunkâs interior. How did the Darling in my dream do it?
I start knocking on the inner walls.
Nothing happens.
âCome on.â
I think it was the left side of the trunk in my dream. I rap my knuckles again. Once, twice. Nothing.
Maybe Iâm not being forceful enough. The Darling in my dream hit the trunk with more of a thump than a knock.
I try again andâ
A drawer pops open.
And nestled inside, aged by decades of waiting, is a box.