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Authors: Jeffrey Cook,Katherine Perkins

Street Fair (19 page)

BOOK: Street Fair
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But if you want to ride a carousel

That's less of ponies than Victorian sheep,

You'll really want to try a villanelle."

Megan could feel how the patter of the words seemed to fall into place, to percolate in her mind like magical caffeine, but she tried not to overthink it. She didn't want to jinx anything when it was starting to work.

Somewhere between '
Though Dylan Thomas did it very well
' and '
The learning curve can be a little steep,'
was the sound of wings, a whole murmur of them, and a club swinging.

Despite their efforts to get ahead of the conflict, Robin seemed to be very motivated to slow them down. Now, as the gang came up behind them, the music provided an excellent soundtrack for a redcap attack on the small figure of Robin, who evaded their assaults with inhuman grace and quickness and disappeared again.

They continued walking, and soon Ashling wasn't bothering with her twists and turns anymore. They were just walking in straight lines. Megan was relieved, but she started being more observant about her surroundings—albeit observant in her own fashion, her eyes glancing from detail to detail to detail until she felt completely overwhelmed. But one feature, she quickly went back to—and then completely stopped in her tracks.

“Ashling,” she said.

“What?” The Count circled back a little, since Megan had stopped, and flapped to hover in the air at conversational distance.

Megan pointed. “Does Faerie normally have what looks like dead pixels from an HD screen just hanging in the sky?”

Ashling looked. “Not
this
part of Faerie, no.”

“Dreamscape illusion?”

“Dreamscape illusion.”

Cassia groaned. “Should we muss Jude's goggles again?”

“We should probably just stand here a moment until we hear the—“

There was a solid 'whumph.'

The scenery shifted, and the chase was back on as the redcaps aggressively tried to run Robin down. Megan and her friends just tried to run.

 

 

Chapter 27: Up the Storm

 

Finally, they approached a hilltop, when Robin appeared again, this time holding a torch in each hand. The giggle sounded almost tired.

"Persistent and resourceful,” he said. “This really might be a good show. Well, except that I've still agreed to do a job. So, something, something, fire, scarecrow." He dropped the torches, and fire swept down towards them, igniting the grasses.

"Is that an illusion?" Megan called.

"Do you want to risk it?" Lani shouted back.

Ashling jumped off of the Count's back, grabbing onto Megan's hair to keep herself balanced on a shoulder, and started humming. Megan had done more with winds, but knew the song. She hadn't practiced it a lot, but started into it anyway. As she did, it occurred to her precisely why she hadn't practiced it much. Quick, powerful gusts of wind she could do. Swirling winds she could handle. She'd even managed some small, personal rainstorms. This was something else entirely—not only calling up strong winds and rain, but trying to maintain control of all of it. Lani would say something about it having a lot of moving parts, or something.

Clouds gathered, and the wind picked up, blowing from behind Megan. It wasn't as focused as most of Megan's wind spells, but it didn't swirl, and she wasn't going for a single blast this time. Whatever Robin had that was driving the fires downhill instead of up and towards him, the winds disrupted it, and the fire's approach towards Megan and her group was blunted.

She struggled with notes and concentration on the song a couple of times, but Ashling kept coaching her, shouting in her ear over the winds and helping her along. The fires started climbing the hill, and spreading to the sides, though none of it touched Robin, parting and burning the grasses around him. Though blunted, the fires were still approaching Megan's group, and she knew she couldn't keep it up forever, or even for all that long.

Despite the difficulties, Megan sang louder, practically shouting the ancient lyrics to the skies, getting into even greater musical complexity. A couple of times, the winds shifted, but she kept managing to rein them back in, and within several seconds of her call to the skies, the rains started. It began as a drizzle, and then turned into a full torrent.

The fire was too intense already for the rains to put them out entirely, but as long as she kept singing, they didn't spread as fast.

Robin shouted something down to her from the hilltop, but she couldn't understand a word as she continued fighting to keep control of both the winds and the rain, even as she could feel the magical effort she was having to put into the song tiring her even faster.

That was when Peadar showed up again, charging up the hill towards Robin. Robin Goodfellow drew what appeared to be a wooden sword, and the two engaged in a fierce battle, Robin dancing among the fires to limit lines of approach, keeping the fight a one-on-one as the other redcaps and the hag continually shied away from risking the fires to go after him.

Somehow, the wooden sword took hits from the wicked club, and Peadar certainly seemed to take its threat seriously. As far as Megan could tell, Peadar was the better fighter, but any advantage that gained him was countered by Robin's reflexes, and the fact that Robin was fighting mostly defensively, just trying to stay out of easy reach.

They fenced and fought, with Megan continuing to call down the rains. Ashling had to hold on tight, frequently shouting into her ear to help Megan remember the words, and remember the music. Despite the help, and some practice, this was a stronger spell than Megan was used to, and a number of times, she felt like she was on the edge of losing control of it. If she did, she didn't know if the rains might stop, and a windstorm might whip the fires up, if a true storm might develop while they were in the open, or if it might simply stop. Her voice wavered, her throat grew raw, but as the flames died down under the rains, she started to rein it back in.

Without the fires, the redcaps started to close in on the fight, and Cassia charged up the hill to help, backed by Maxwell. Exhausted, Megan staggered, almost falling before Lani caught her, and helped her remain standing.

As the crew surrounded him, Robin looked towards Megan, then at Peadar, and smirked once more. "Good fight, Boy Scout. Let's do it again some time." And he disappeared.

Megan expected more cussing from the redcap, but instead, he just looked her way, and nodded. It took her a moment, but she realized, given the lack of the effects of the redcap gaze, that he wasn't looking at her, but somewhere over her shoulder. She turned to look.

As she did, Robin reappeared, wooden sword in hand, readied to strike. "A lovely day, a lovely dance, Princess. I didn't want to do this, but..." He paused, as a tiny arrow grazed his arm, leaving a shallow cut. The arrow continued on, hitting the ground not far from Peadar. Robin paused, looking in the same direction as Megan, to see Gilroy, standing on an apple tree, bow in hand.

Peadar took the tiny arrow from the ground, placing it into his mouth like it was half a toothpick, point-first. The redcap grinned. “Tastes like rabbit.”

“Oh come on, that barely drew blood!”

“Barely. Good to the last drop.”

Robin glared, almost like a petulant child, as the redcap sampled his blood. Megan remembered, from that first chase, how that worked. Illusions, trickery, or no, the redcap would be able to follow that quarry flawlessly.

Robin Goodfellow clearly recognized the fact too, and he dropped the sword. "All right, all right, you've got me. I'm out.” He reached into his pocket, pulled out far more black cloth than should have been able to fit in such a pocket, and tossed it at them. “I'm throwing in the towel. His mortal majesty can play this game alone."

Peadar nodded, and the hag turned her ring back the other way. Peadar made a shooing motion, "Very good. You may go now."

Megan would have thought what followed odd, had she not seen the Queen and King, after her aims last year had been thwarted. The petulance disappeared, and Robin bowed, deep and formal, to Peadar. "Well played, Boy Scout. Well played. Next time." And with that, he was gone.

Megan turned back to regard Peadar, but it was Lani who spoke. "So, what now?"

The redcap gestured back over his shoulder with one thumb. "The portal to the market is just up that way. There'll be guards from it any time now, coming to see what all of that was about. We're good?"

Megan took a deep breath, then nodded. "So long as he'll leave us alone now, your debt is paid."

Peadar grinned, waving to his crew, with Gilroy moving to settle on Peadar's shoulder. "Come on, boys and girls," Peadar called, "More fun another day. We have to go fishing."

Megan was pondering those words and putting the shroud in the pack when the Unseelie band reached them, and Peadar paused a few feet from her, ignoring Ashling's glares at Gilroy.

“One thing you and I can agree on, Highness: in the end, it always pays to be a team player,” Peadar said, and then the group set off again.

Chapter 28: Clearance

 

True to Peadar's comment, various faeries coming from the Market showed up not long after the end of the fight, investigating the smoke. By then, Robin, as well as Peadar and his crew, had departed. Megan assumed whatever she'd interrupted with her calling-in of the debt had to be pretty important, because the Unseelie mob seemed in quite the hurry, once they'd verified that all was considered paid. Whatever the case, Ashling seemed a lot more relaxed once all of the sprites were out of sight.

The Market wasn't completely shut down when they got there, but some of the vendors were packing up their merchandise, and a few were taking down their tents. The oddity wasn't some of the dealers trying to get a head-start, it was what was left once a tent was removed. Instead of the usual small messes, or empty lots, once there was no longer a tent in place, it was like there was nothing there: small pockets of self-contained vacuum that Megan could only sort of absorb out of the corner of her peripheral vision, because any attempt to stare at any of them found her looking somewhere else. Eventually, the unoccupied space seemed to get smaller and smaller, until tents that had been a few spaces apart before were now neighbors. Megan didn't begin to comprehend how any of it actually worked, but Lani's comments—about how the market could appear and, when done, vanish—finally made sense.

“I wonder if there's any more edible hats left. Maybe they even have some closing down sales,” Ashling said. “Some of the best are at a big purple tent that's smaller on the inside. No time to go see if they're still open, I guess.”

"Smaller on the inside?” asked Megan, more than a bit hoarse, but feeling the need to ask. “Why would you do that?"

"Well, they cater to a more diminutive clientele. Sprites, pixies, brownie children, so on, so forth. Some of us feel much more comfortable when we can check out things just for us, without feeling loomed over."

"So why don't they just have a smaller tent?"

"At the price of this real estate?” Ashling threw her arms into the air. “You'd be stupid not to fill it up."

"I guess so." Megan had more questions, but her throat still hurt, and she still felt like she needed about a week's worth of sleep. "I just hope the map people haven't closed up yet."

"Cartographers," Lani said.

"They won't have," Ashling assured Megan, "With the weirdness of the market, and paths, once it's closed down, a lot of people need directions. Or want maps for the rest of their vacation. They do great business right at the end. Plus, there's the satisfaction part."

Megan hated to ask, but couldn't help herself. "Satisfaction part?"

Ashling nodded enthusiastically. "Goblins love telling people where to go."

Megan just sighed and accepted the water bottle Lani offered her while they walked.

True to the pixie's comments, the section of the market with most of the cartographers was still full. Megan noticed that in the adjoining area, where she'd spent most of her time when she'd had a chance to browse, the art dealers were mostly still open as well. It looked like a lot of the people buying full-sized paintings or statues were picking up their purchases now that they were getting ready to leave. She started to meander that way for a few last looks, but a tug on her shoulder from Lani reminded her that they were in a hurry and had more important business.

Megan drained the rest of the water, and followed. It took a while to find the correct shop. Not all of the shopkeepers were terribly willing to help competitors, while others were every bit as helpful, and verbose about it, as Ashling tended to be. Most of the latter weren't very helpful either. Finally, one goblin peered at the map and said “Go try Xurde.”

The girls, the cats, the Count, and Justin followed his gestures to a large red tent, outside of which stood a woman with bright blue eyes and golden curls—her eyes were literally glowing with azure light, and her hair looked like actual coils of gold wire—in clothes made of leaves and flower petals. The sign hung up on the front of the tent simply read "
Here Be Dragon
."

BOOK: Street Fair
6.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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