would ever use.
âYes,â Hettie said, her boldness fading a little. Her hands went to her nightgown, and she looked down, suddenly shy.
âAre you an accomplice to this faery?â
âIâ No. But I donât want you to hurt him. What are you going to do with him?â
âThis faeryââthe lady said, waving a hand in the butlerâs directionââhas been found guilty of murdering one of His Majesty the Sly Kingâs most valued servants. He will be put to death, of course. Drowned in a bog, I think.â
âOh,â breathed Hettie.
âAnd you?â
âYes, miss.â
âWho are you?â The lady punctuated the are with one sharply raised eyebrow.
âIâm not anybody.â
âYes, I can see that, but what sort of nobody? You are the strangest-looking faery Iâve ever seen. And no hair, or Iâd think you simply a particularly ugly human.â
Hettie knew better than to tell her she was a changeling. The daughter of a human mother and a faery father. Something in-between. English people didnât like changelings, but she had always been told faeries liked them even less.
âOh, I am a faery, miss. Only . . . See, I come from England and Iâve lived there my whole life, andâwell, I sâpose I picked up a bit of their looks.â
Twelve pairs of eyes met across her head. There was a long pause in which the frosty air seemed to fill up and become heavy with all sorts of unspoken words and laughter.
Then the lady in the fish-bone dress let out a high, musical laugh that set everyone else to laughing, too, and the horse-people laughed, and the old woman laughed, and even the silver bells seem to tinkle with their own merry notes.
âShe is so exquisitely funny,â the faery lady said.
âEx- quisitely ,â one of the horse-people mimicked, and that set them all to laughing again.
The fish-bone ladyâs mouth twitched. Her eyes went a little blacker, and her brows seemed to become even sharper. Then she laughed again, too, louder than anyone.
âJohn?â she said, turning to a horse-person with white hair and white skin that glittered as if with frost. âJohn, let her ride upon you. We shall take her with us.â
âWhat?â The creature named John looked perfectly horrified. âThat thing ? On me ?â
âOh, no, Iââ Panic gripped Hettie. It wrapped around her throat, made her breath escape in little gasps. âPlease, I mustnâtââ
They were all staring at her, all those black eyes, sparks of amusement in their depths, sparks of malice. She couldnât go with them . She couldnât be taken away from these woods, or the cottage. This was where the door had opened and where she had arrived, and this was where Bartholomew would find her when he came for her. But what will he do if Iâm not here?
The thought made her sick.
âPlease, miss,â she said, taking a step toward the faery lady. âPlease donât make me leave.â
The faery lady did not even look at her. âYou must. You will be my Whatnot. Or I will snip out your tongue. Donât be tiresome.â
Hettie closed her mouth with a plop.
âNow,â said the faery lady, whirling away. âVizalia? Send a dispatch to the King. One of his Belusites has been killed. The wrongdoer has been dealt with. Nothing was found. You neednât say anything of my little bauble.â
And the next thing Hettie knew, she was on the back of a white horse with hair like wisps of snowy wind. Everything was confusion, stomping hooves and whispering cloaks. Her steed began to gallop, away into the woods. The faery butler. Hettie looked frantically at the other riders. Where is he? He isnât here! With a little shiver, she glanced back over her shoulder.
Three figures had stayed behind in front of the cottage. The faery butler was on the ground, kneeling, his
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