Sixty-One Nails: Courts of the Feyre (33 page)

BOOK: Sixty-One Nails: Courts of the Feyre
11.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

    She tucked her skirt underneath her and sat on the grass beside me while I got my breath back. A few feet away, an ancient gravestone started with "HERE LIES…" My heart was still thumping in my chest and memories of how the void had twisted around me distorted my grip on reality, making me faintly nauseous. "What did you do?" she repeated.

    "I don't know. I got distracted by the voices and lost you. I thought I was stuck and I panicked."

    She leaned over me, looking into my eyes, possibly for signs of concussion. The late slanted sunlight filtered through her curls and I was struck again by how beautiful she was. Her lips curved in a way that gave you a sense that she was always on the edge of a smile and her eyelashes were incredibly long. "What?" she whispered.

    "Nothing, I was… nothing." I closed my eyes, but that was worse because it made my head thump. I swallowed and opened my eyes again.
    "Are you OK?"
    "I just need a minute."

    "I thought I'd lost you." She looked down at me, concern gradually replaced by another expression I couldn't interpret.

    "I thought I'd lost myself," I admitted. "I heard my name. You
called
for me."

    "I got stuck, sort of."
    "You called my name," she repeated.
    "I was lost. I couldn't find you."

    She paused, that strange expression in her eyes again. "Are you always this…" She faltered. "This what?"

    She leaned across me, resting her hand on the grass on the other side of me and lowered her face and kissed me, pressing her warm soft lips to mine. Her eyes were open, watching my reaction. I was so surprised, I lay there numb for a moment, unable to react. The stone around my neck pulsed into warmth at her touch, reminding me of its presence. She lifted her lips slowly from mine and then brushed her nose against mine, watching me all the while. "Dense," she said. "Pardon? "
    "Dense. Are you always this dense? "
    "What do you mean? "
    "You have no idea, do you? "
    "About what? "
    "See what I mean?"

    She leaned down and kissed me again, fully this time, pressing herself down on me so the warmth of her weighed on me. The stone against my chest flared with heat, her body pressing it between us as instinct took over and I kissed her back. Her lips were soft and firm and she tasted of sunshine. My senses swam with the scent of her and I found my fingers brushing back her hair of their own volition.

    She lifted herself, head on one side as if she was waiting for me to say something.
    "What was that for?" I asked her.
    She paused, considering the question.

    "Dense," she said, nodding, "definitely dense."

    She pushed herself back and lifted herself to her feet, brushing the threads of grass from her skirt. She squinted into the sunshine and then collected her bag and the map from the grass a short distance away. She wandered back over and dropped the items in an unceremonious heap.

    "What was that about?" I asked, shading my eyes against the sun behind her.

    "Well, I stepped off the line and waited for you and instead of following me, you didn't. I stood around for a while and was wondering whether I should travel back down the way and try to find you when I heard my name. You were calling for me but I couldn't see you anywhere. Then the air sort of bent around itself and you came hurtling out and crash-landed on the grass. "
    "No, after that."

    "After that? After that I wondered if you'd broken your neck, but it's OK because I think you landed on your head."
    "After that."
    "After that I kissed you."

    She stepped across me using both hands to tuck her skirt between her knees and then knelt down, one knee either side of my stomach. The light was still behind her, but she leaned over me putting her hands on either side of my head so her shade sheltered my face. "Would you like me to do it again?"

    Her voice was softer and had an edge of huskiness to it. She lowered her face so her hair fell around us and I could see those fabulous green eyes glinting at me. I was acutely conscious of her weight resting low across my stomach.

    "Blackbird, I thought we were…" I stopped and started again. "I thought you were…"

    She sat up, her weight suddenly heavy on my stomach, her arms folded. The sunlight was full on my face again, but I could see the spark of anger in her eyes. "What did you think, Niall? That I'm too old for you? What is it with you and age? I was born in 1642. Work it out if it matters so much to you."

    "I thought we were friends."

    She put her hand on my chest and pushed herself up, standing over me, looking down. I pushed myself back up onto my elbows. "Friends? Is that what we are? Really?"

    She turned, collected her things from the ground and walked up the slope, shoulders square and head up. In a moment she had vanished around the corner of the low stone church. I shook my head, trying to clear it, wondering if the fall had knocked the wits out of me. None of this made any sense. I knew she was angry with me, but now I couldn't figure out what I'd done wrong. I pushed myself to my feet and brushed the dry grass stalks from my clothes, finding myself largely unscathed, despite the bad landing. I stood up and looked around. I was in a graveyard behind a church, the ground sloping steeply down to a little stream hidden in the thickets at the bottom. The church was surrounded by ancient yew trees and it took me a moment to orientate myself. I struggled up the slope between the graves and found the gravel path around the church. I caught sight of her sitting on the wooden bench in the lych-gate. She was sat in the long shadow of the surrounding trees as if nothing had happened. I shook my head again, wondering whether anything had happened or whether I was suffering the after-effects of a bump on the head.

    I walked down the path and through the gates to stand in front of her.

    She looked at me, head on one side in that characteristic pose. She took in the dishevelled appearance, the bits of grass still caught in my hair. Deprived of sleep, chased, threatened and almost killed several times, I wasn't sure I understood anything anymore. She got to her feet, shaking her head and chuckling to herself, and walked off down the lane. I trudged after her, more confused than ever. Had the fall addled my wits completely? Had she really kissed me or was I hallucinating? No, she had definitely kissed me. But then she stomped off in a huff and then laughed at me. She paused, waiting for me to catch up and then walked alongside me. I felt confused and resentful at being made fun of, but she didn't say anything and after a while I subsided into a circular thought pattern leaving me no wiser.

    We walked down a twisted lane, sunken between hedges as the light faded into twilight. There were glimpses of farmhouses and outbuildings through the hedge and the occasional distant tractor. A single car passed us, slowing as it drew level and then accelerating away once it was past. We crossed a bridge over a brook and started the climb up the hill on the other side. Real blackbirds scolded their alarm at our passing and there were occasional rustlings from the hedge beside the road that might, I suppose, have been a rabbit. She didn't speak and I had no idea what to say, so I stayed silent, mulling over what had happened.

    My relationships with women had always been fraught. Even my marriage to Katherine had been difficult. We had been brought together by friends who thought we were made for each other, and at first that had been true. We wined and dined, and went to the theatre and talked of culture and art and politics. We were affectionate and even passionate. We stayed up late and spoke about history and philosophy and our jobs and even our friends, but never about us. Our relationship was something we never discussed. I liked her a lot, but in the end it had been she who had seduced me. It was she who pushed our relationship from an intellectual exchange to a physical consummation.

    Quite suddenly the relationship changed. I found the physical aspect of our relationship overwhelming. I was obsessed with her. I couldn't wait to see her and be with her. But she wanted something beyond the moment, beyond the enjoyment of each other.

    We broke up on a Friday. I was looking forward to a weekend of Katherine. I thought everything was fine until she called me and told me it was over. When I asked her why, she told me she wanted more than just sex and when I said that I thought we had more than sex, she laughed and said that was the problem. I told her I didn't understand and she told me she thought that was true.

    That was why I asked her to marry me. Not immediately, not then, but later. I found I couldn't bear the thought of living day to day without her. It wasn't until much later that I realised I couldn't live with her constant suspicion and innate mistrust. By then we had Alex, and everything had changed.

    "You're quiet." Blackbird brought me back to the present.
    "Hmmm?"
    "We've walked about two miles and you haven't said a word."
    "I was thinking."
    "What about?"
    "Nothing."
    "Two miles of nothing?"
    "Old stuff, stuff that's gone; things long passed."
    "Want to talk about it?"
    "No. It's history."

    We walked on, rounding a bend and walking past a farmyard where a tractor was left running unattended, the driver presumably engaged in one of the buildings. "Blackbird, why aren't we friends?"

    "Aren't we?" She looked sideways at me. "I thought we were."
    "But you said–"

    "Back there? I don't know if we were friends then, but we are now, if you want to be."

    "Would you do something, for me?" I asked her. "What's that? "
    "Stick with me, stay friends with me."

    I waited while she considered my request. She didn't just say "OK", and I valued that. She treated my proposal seriously. Friendship wasn't something I offered lightly or trivially. It was a commitment to a way of being. It cheered me that she considered it carefully. She skipped forward and turned in front of me, leaving me no choice but to stop or step around her. I stopped and she rested her hands on my chest. "Do you know what you're asking?"

    "Yes. No. Is it so terrible to be my friend? Does it mean something else to the Feyre?"

    "No, it's not terrible and friendship amongst the Feyre has all the usual connotations. But do you know what it means when a guy says to a girl, let's just be friends? "
    "Oh, I see. I didn't mean that. I meant be my friend as well, alongside anything else you can be, that you want to be."

    "And what do you want, Niall?" Her eyes were sharp and focused.

    "Honestly? Right now I want a good night's sleep somewhere where no one is trying to kill me and the comfort of knowing I have a friend in the world. Beyond that, I am prepared to see what tomorrow brings. "
    "A true answer and a fair one." She turned and continued walking, leaving me once more to catch up. "So is that a yes, or a no?" I asked her.

    She looked back over her shoulder. "It's not a no." I caught up with her and settled back into her gentle pace.

    "It wasn't exactly a yes, either," I pointed out. "No, it wasn't, was it?"

    And I had to settle for that. I figured that I had offended her earlier when she thought I was rejecting her attentions. Now she was more reserved. "As your friend, Niall… "
    "Yes."

    "Would you confide in me? Would you tell me your secrets?"

    "As your friend, I might, assuming I had any secrets. "
    "Hmm. So if you liked someone, would it be a secret? "
    "Not a secret exactly, but it might be difficult to talk about. "
    "Why would that be?"

    "She might be very complicated. I might not know where I was with her, even if I did like her quite a lot actually."
    "She might be older than you?"

    "She might, but that wouldn't necessarily be a problem. "
    "Then why would she be complicated?"

    I sighed, wrestling with the theoretical realities. "Because she might have a lot of secrets of her own; because she might change in the wink of an eye and be someone different, someone I didn't know or someone else that I did, if I ever knew her at all. How would I know who she was?"

    "How do any of us know? We only show the parts we want others to see. We might not be able to cloak it in magic or switch in a moment, but we can all be different people, if we choose."

    "That's true I suppose, but it's hard to trust someone when you don't know who they are." And trust, as I had learned too late with Katherine, is where friendship and even love are founded.

    There was a long pause while we walked along, side by side, in silence.

    "You could get to know her," she suggested. "Yes," I agreed, "I might just try that."

    We walked along and after a few more yards, her hand slipped into mine and we walked along companionably. We could have been out for an evening walk if it weren't for the dark box in Blackbird's bag. "Glamour has a kind of side effect," she said, apropos nothing in particular.

    "It does? What kind of side effect?" I had visions of all my hair falling out or my teeth going green.

    "It becomes second nature. "
    "How is that a side effect?"

    "You use it all the time and it becomes the norm. It becomes part of you."
    "Why is that a problem?"
    She stopped and I halted, waiting for her to carry on. Instead she looked pensive, worried even.
    "What's the matter?"
    "Niall, do you like the way I look?"

    "Is it important? I mean you look lovely, but looks aren't everything."

    "Do you? Because I can change it if you don't. "
    "What would you change it to?"

    "Anything. Anything at all. Blonde, brunette, buxom, boyish, fat, thin, pink, green."

    "No, no. You don't need to change the way you look for me. You just need to look like yourself."

    "That's the thing." She hesitated. "I don't know what I look like. I've had glamour since I was fifteen and I've looked however I've wanted ever since. You want me to look like I am, but I choose how I am. I don't know how not to choose."

Other books

Saving Her Destiny by Candice Gilmer
Masque by Bethany Pope
Cancer Schmancer by Fran Drescher
The Villa by Rosanna Ley
Robots e imperio by Isaac Asimov
The Boy Who Lost Fairyland by Catherynne M. Valente
Amplify by Anne Mercier
The Twyning by Terence Blacker