The Never King: Chapter 32
The Never King (Vicious Lost Boys Book 1)
Thereâs something about Mom now that feels settled. Like if she were a top, all of the spin has gone out of her and sheâs finally sitting still.
The moonlight shines on the macabre scene in our backyard. There is a giant hole in the center where bodies are starting to pile up.
âIsnât this risky?â I ask. And alsoâ¦I canât believe Iâm in my backyard with two fae princes, a myth, and a shadow of death burying bodies six feet in the ground.
I donât know how or when I became a person that took this all in with no issue.
âDonât worry, Darling,â Kas says. âBrownies turn to dust within a week.â
As the boys finish up the dirty work, I turn to Mom. âI need to tell you something.â
âWhat is it, baby?â She is paler than when I left her, but her face is clean, as is her hair, so clearly sheâs been taking care of herself without me to look after her.
âIâm going back,â I tell her. âTo Neverland.â
Her eyes are on me but Iâm never entirely sure if sheâs seeing me.
âDo you want to come with me?â
I didnât run this past Pan, but I donât care. The house has many spare rooms. Thereâs plenty of room for her.
âCome to Neverland?â she asks and looks back at the boys. Bash is shirtless and is shoveling dirt in, all of the corded muscle in his back working overtime.
God, he is a sight. A fae prince who I think might be mine. I canât be sure yet. I donât know what the rules are about all that, but thereâs plenty of time to figure it out.
One thing I am absolutely sure of is that I will fight anyone who thinks they can take him from me.
I might have only scratched the surface of who Peter Pan and the Lost Boys are, but instinct never lies and they feel like mine.
They are mine.
âI donât think I want to,â Mom says.
âReally?â
âIâ¦hereâ¦listenââ
âIâm listening, Mom.â
âI like it here.â She glances up at the house painted in broad strokes of moonlight. âI feel better.â
âButâ¦youâll be all alone.â
âIâll be okay.â
I was an adult before I ever had a chance to be a child. And I always looked after my mom. I never wanted to. Her endless episodes, the instability, I hated every part of it.
And while I wanted to escape it, now that Iâm faced with the possibility, Iâm terrified of doing it.
âMomââ
âGo.â She squeezes my hand. âGo to Neverland. The mermaids will be happy youâve returned.â
The mermaids? Right, the spirits in the lagoon.
âIf youâre sureâ¦â
âYes.â
I slide my arm around her shoulders and pull her into me. âIâll come back to check on you as much as I can.â As soon as I get over the heart-pounding fear of jumping off a cliff.
She smiles to herself. âI would like that, baby.â
When the hole is full and all of the Brownie blood is cleaned from the floor, the boys stand outside looking like visions of war covered in blood and dirt, smoke from several lit cigarettes curling in the moonlight.
âIf you need me,â I start to say to Mom and then realize thereâs no way for her to reach me. There are no cell phones on Neverland. No form of communication.
âIâll be okay, Winnie.â She hugs me and when she pulls back, she says, âDo you want to know a secret?â
âYes.â
âI wanted to stay too, before they broke my head.â
âReally?â
âI miss the magic.â She closes her eyes, sinks into the memories. âAnd theââ
âCloudberries,â I guess.
âYes.â
âIâll bring you some next time.â
âAnd then Iâll make pies and cakes and weâll have a party.â
âIf youâd like.â
Her eyes glaze over again.
âWhy donât you go make yourself some tea and rest?â
âOkay, baby.â
âI love you, Mom.â
âI love you too.â She slips away from me and shuts the door and I stay there on the front porch for a long time trying to decide if Iâm making the right decision.
Will she be okay without me?
She loved me fiercely, but her love always hurt.
I donât know how it feels to be loved the right way or to choose to feel the hurt instead of being forced into it.
Maybe thatâs what love really is, at the heart of itâchoosing the pain with the pleasure.
I return to the boys. I can tell by their energy that theyâre growing inpatient, but they werenât prepared to rush me.
âIâm ready,â I say.
Peter Pan takes my hand and leads me off into the night, the little box containing his shadow tucked beneath his arm.