The Faerie's Honeymoon

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Authors: Emma Holly

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BOOK: The Faerie's Honeymoon
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The Faerie’s Honeymoon

Emma Holly

eBook edition

Copyright 2012 Emma Holly. All rights reserved. With the exception of quotes used in reviews, this book may not be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written permission of the author.

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to the vendor and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

This story is a work of fiction and should be treated as such. It includes sexually explicit content which is only appropriate for adults - and not every adult at that. Those who are offended by more adventurous depictions of sexuality or frank language possibly shouldn’t read it. Literary license has been taken in this book. It is not intended to be a sexual manual. Any resemblance to actual places, events, or persons living or dead is either fictitious or coincidental. That said, the author hopes you enjoy this tale!

“The Faerie’s Honeymoon” is an approximately
25,000-word novella
that features mf interactions. This edition includes an excerpt from another book.

Discover other exciting Emma Holly titles at:
http://www.emmaholly.com

eISBN: 978-0-9849162-2-1

cover photo: Jimmy Thomas

The Faerie’s Honeymoon ...

DUVALL
of Talfryn adores his new human bride. She’s smart, she’s sexy, and they love each other - flaws and all. The half-magic city of Resurrection seems ideal for a honeymoon. It’s less dangerous than Faerie, and Belle can get her first real glimpse of his fae nature.

Problem is, Belle gets a glimpse of more than he counted on. Will this down-to-earth junkshop owner decide an entitled prince of enchantments isn’t who she signed on to wed? Can Duvall overcome his pride and bare his true heart to her?

Only a honeymoon fit for a faerie can settle this conundrum.

a companion story to
Move Me

reviewers rave about Emma’s HIDDEN series

“A truly fantastic read! Ms. Holly turns the shape-shifting world on their respective ears! ... 5 of 5 stars!” -
badasschicksthatbite.blogspot.com

“I don’t know how Emma Holly does it but I hope she keeps on doing it ... a smoking HOT read and a great story.” -
In My Humble Opinion
(inmho-read.blogspot.com)


Hidden Talents
is the perfect package of supes, romance, mystery and HEA!" -
paperbackdolls.com

Other Indie Titles

by Emma Holly

The Prince With No Heart

Hidden Talents

The Assassins’ Lover

Hidden Depths

Date Night

Move Me

The Faerie’s Honeymoon

Chapter One

THE
faerie prince known as Duvall Duvall - very much
not
his truename, thank you - was bringing his human bride to the world of magic for the first time.

The trip was their honeymoon, their destination the half-magic city of Resurrection in upstate New York. Invisible to most humans, Resurrection was what was known as a “Pocket” city. A number of these had been created by Duvall’s brethren, places where humans and other races could interact to the hopeful benefit of both. As long as the race could play nice with others, the fae granted it visas. Today, Resurrection sheltered shapeshifters, demons, humans with “extra” talents, and quite a number of other beings. The original land of Faerie, whose essence had gone into forming the Pockets, was too often a magical Wild West: lawless, chaotic, and more than even some fae could handle.

Duvall could handle quite a lot. He’d spent the majority of his life in Faerie. His parents ruled the land of Talfryn with a steadier hand than most. If an enemy hadn’t chased him into the human realm, where he’d had the supreme good fortune of meeting his future wife, Duvall expected he’d still reside in the Old Country.

His wife had changed everything, Fate bless her.

At the current moment, his beloved was trying unsuccessfully to wave down a train station porter to help them with their luggage.

“Belle,” he said, gently rubbing the sleeve of her beautiful red wool coat. The suburban platform was open to the winter weather, and - unlike him - she needed the garment for warmth.

“They’re ignoring me,” she said, craning around the other departing passengers. There were more than usual. Humans rarely noticed the Resurrection stop existed. Magic protected it from ordinary sight. Duvall expected the Weretiger New Year celebrations explained the crowd. Any supes who’d scattered beyond the borders would return home for Resurrection’s week-long version of Mardi Gras. Unfortunately for Belle, this meant she had to compete with beings who more naturally drew the station staff’s attention.

She clucked in annoyance as yet another porter rushed to serve someone else. “This is worse than trying to hail a taxi in Manhattan. I knew I shouldn’t have packed everything I own. Now we’ll be stuck lugging the stuff ourselves. How did you get away with just an overnight case?”

Duvall got away with an overnight case because, here in Resurrection, he could magick anything he wanted. Already, he could feel his batteries sucking up ambient power. They hadn’t been able to do that while he was in her world. Now they filled so quickly he was getting a head rush.


Belle
,” he said more firmly, giving her lovely straight hair a tug.

“What?” she said, a hint of a snap in it. A second later, remorse pinched her mouth.

He smiled. Belle sometimes felt guilty for her temper, but he knew the passionate heart it was an outgrowth of. “They can’t see you, sweetheart. As a ... non-magical human, you’re nearly invisible to them.”

“Really?” Belle said, her annoyance fading as her curiosity rose.

“Really. I know it’s inconvenient, but it prevents humans who don’t have an invitation into the Pocket from being accidentally escorted in.”

She peered back at the uniformed porters, most of whom were elves or mixbloods - though that wouldn’t be obvious to her. More spells hid traits like pointy ears or oddly colored skin. Observing nothing peculiar, she returned her gaze to him. At the sight of her dear pretty face, his heart turned over. God, he loved her, from her mysterious dark green eyes to her long straight nose to her wonderful willow-wand figure. Belle’s parents hadn’t exactly built up her self esteem, as humans liked to say on talk shows. His darling didn’t always think of herself as attractive, but she’d become the image of love to him.

Her lips curved as she recognized his expression.“You’re going gooey again.”

“Faeries don’t go gooey,” he said, mostly to see her grin.

She didn’t disappoint, her teeth flashing with the acerbic humor he loved. “Careful, Mr. Duvall. That’s sailing very close to a lie. I wouldn’t want you giving yourself a headache before we reach the hotel.”

“Certainly not before I summon a porter.”

“Can you?” she asked.

Duvall smiled and let his concealing glamour fall.

Duvall’s powers had been substantially curtailed in her realm. Belle had seen him twinkle in shared dreams and in heightened moments of lovemaking. Like all fae, he was out-of-the-ordinary good looking in any reality, enough that he’d thought it best to cover up on the train. As a result, this was Belle’s first glimpse of him fully charged and in his element. While Duvall couldn’t deny he’d been looking forward to showing off for his beloved, he wasn’t prepared for how taken aback she was.

“Wow,” she said a little shakily. “With a heaping helping of
gosh
.”

Duvall’s stomach went oddly tight. Had he frightened her? Would his alien display cause her to regard him in a less easy light? He didn’t want that. Many races liked to claim faeries were half pride, but Belle was his equal in every way that counted. In truth, Belle was his soul mate.

Before he could decide what to say to make it better, a bowing elf porter rushed over. To go by the gold braid on his uniform, he was the captain of the station’s crew.

“Prince Duvall, sir!” he exclaimed. “Forgive me for not seeing you there. How may I serve you and your companion?”

Elves sometimes resented faeries, who - admittedly - didn’t let them forget they were a few rungs down on the magical power scale. Duvall gave this one points for referring to Belle politely. Elves were much less snobbish than faeries, but even they occasionally snubbed non-magical humans.

“No matter, cousin,” he said, for that’s what elves were to faeries. “We’d like our luggage organized and a limo to transport us to the Downtown Grande. Also, if you could recommend a trustworthy driver, I’d be grateful. This is my wife’s first visit to the city. We’ll probably do some sightseeing.”

The elf’s slanty brows went up a millimeter at him identifying Belle as his wife. Faeries dallied with humans considerably more than they married them.

“I believe we can satisfy you, sir,” he said. “There’s a brand new Spink demon come on staff. Passed the gargoyles’ trust test with flying colors. Darius knows the city and can make sure you and your wife aren’t bothered by riffraff, no matter where you go.”

Duvall hesitated. Trust test notwithstanding, he wasn’t sure he wanted to expose Belle to a demon so early on. He hadn’t forgotten her ear-splitting scream of reaction to her first ghost.

“It
is
Weretiger New Year,” the elf reminded. “Hard to rent muscle at the last minute.”

This was true. He looked at Belle, whose eyes were as round as saucers. He’d explained to her that some demons lived here, but it wasn’t the same as being driven around by one. “Would you like that? It’ll be safe enough. The gargoyles’ psychic exams are difficult to jigger. Plus, you’d want someone with you if you did any wandering on your own.”

“I’d like to meet a demon,” she said. “I’m just afraid I’ll accidentally do something insensitive. Will it be offended if I say ‘Oh God’?”

The elf burst into a surprised laugh, which he then attempted to cover with a cough.

Duvall searched for a diplomatic way to explain the porter’s amusement, one that wouldn’t reflect too badly on his own kind. He’d known Belle long enough to guess at her ideas of what was fair. “Demons have very strict visas, my beloved, and faeries more or less set the rules for them staying here.”

“You mean the demon wouldn’t dare complain, no matter what I did.”

“Yes,” Duvall admitted with a sigh. “But it’s also probably very grateful to be here instead of its former home. They don’t call them hell dimensions for nothing. It truly might not feel an insult, given that.”

“Spinks aren’t religious,” the elf added, “if sir will pardon my saying so. You can swear to anything you want in front of them. Just be yourself, ma’am. They’ve met enough mundanes to know how you folks are.”

His unthinking use of the pejorative made Belle bite her lip in amusement.
Mundane
wasn’t the most PC term for non-magical humans. Aware he’d used it once or twice himself, Duvall decided not to kick up a fuss.

“All right,” his beloved said to the elf. “We appreciate your help.”

~

Harvard Business School hadn’t prepared Belle for Resurrection - or for seeing Duvall drop his camouflage. Back in Kingaken where they’d met, he’d been gorgeous. Here, he was a creature at least half concocted by special effects.
Stunning
was the best word she could think of for how he looked. That the porter recognized him on sight disconcerted her, though she didn’t blame the man for fawning. The power her husband radiated was hard to miss. In truth, it was a challenge to look at him and breathe at the same time.

Had she really reminded him to take out the garbage before they left the house this morning?

Perhaps Duvall knew she was off balance. He reached for her hand as the jockey-sized porter loaded their suitcases onto a wheeled trolley. She shouldn’t have packed
everything
she and her friend Susi bought on last week’s shopping junket. Over-preparing wasn’t her usual M.O. She’d just been nervous about this trip - with reason, apparently. She suddenly regretted having spent the bulk of their courtship in sweats and jeans. At the time, her husband had been pretending to be a handyman, and it had seemed reasonable. Now, she felt as ridiculous about that as she did for the garbage thing.

Their luggage settled, the porter began pushing the trolley toward the far end of the train platform, where a concrete ramp led down to the parking lot.

“Here we go,” Duvall said, squeezing her gloved fingers.

Belle screwed up her nerve and looked at him. His eyes weren’t dark brown here, they were some color that mixed gold and earth and mysterious black gemstones. His lashes were luxurious sable fans, and his lips just plain made her shiver. Thoughts of kissing them ran molten to her sex. With his hand on hers, she wasn’t so much walking as gliding dreamily.

The porter, who was wiry but on the small side, wasn’t gliding. He grunted as he turned the unwieldy luggage cart down the exit ramp.

Just like that, Belle’s brain snapped back to normalcy.

Shouldn’t Duvall be helping the man with that?

“That’ll do it,” the porter said, obviously happy to have gotten their belongings to the next transfer point. This end of the parking lot was filled with limos and yellow cabs, many of which were taking on passengers. The porter signaled toward a group of men - drivers, she assumed - who stood in a knot chatting. Spying the porter’s hail, the tallest individual peeled off from his fellows and trotted to his vehicle.

“Mind the spell barrier,” Duvall said.

His hand was on her elbow, steadying her as they followed the porter down the ramp. Belle had no idea what he meant by a barrier until they stepped through it. The thing felt like plastic wrap made of water pressing against her face. She had to physically push her body past the resistance.

“Brr,” she said as it snapped wetly behind her. Curious, she glanced back at it. Though the barrier had been invisible from the other side, now she saw a shimmery sort of curtain wrapping the train station.

“Sorry,” Duvall said, chafing her upper arm through her coat. “I forgot about that affecting you.”

“That’s all right,” Belle said, turning back to him. “That was pretty inter-”

Her mouth stopped working mid-word. More was different on this side of the curtain than whether she could see it. Their chauffeur was stepping out of a shiny white limousine, having driven it to the curb they stood on. The car was nice but normal, so far as she could tell. The driver, on the other hand, not so much.

Belle was tall for a woman, but an eight foot ...
being
was sufficient to put a crick in her neck. The Spink demon, as the porter called him, was way huger than humans got, more like a cartoon character than any creature she was used to. Barn-door hulking as far as muscle went, he was dressed in a very plus-sized double-breasted suit. His skin was a smooth slate gray, his features more or less human despite their color. The exception was two boarlike tusks that curled up from under his upper lip. His charcoal eyes glittered down at her, the emotion behind them unreadable.

“I’m Darius,” he said, doffing his shiny chauffeur’s cap. “If you’re agreeable, I’ll be your secure driver for the length of your stay.”

His basso voice made Barry White sound like a tenor. Belle shut her mouth and swallowed, wondering if apologizing for gawking was the wrong thing to do.

“Prince Duvall,” her husband said, obviously unalarmed. “This is my wife, Princess Belle.”

Darius bowed to both of them. Huge or not, the demon was graceful. His ham-sized hands made the suitcases look like toys as he transferred them to the limo’s trunk. That accomplished, he held the back door open for Duvall and Belle. He didn’t touch her, but left it to her husband to help her in after him. Belle expected that wasn’t an accident. He’d seen that he startled her.

“Thank you,” she said before he shut the door.

His eyes met hers, so alien his inner nature was hard to fathom.
This is a demon
, she told herself, trying to wrap her head around the concept. Duvall had explained the demon dimensions were created by fallen angels eons ago, or so his people believed. Belle didn’t know what to think, despite her understanding of reality having been stretched since meeting him. She didn’t register a sense of evil from the chauffeur - not that she necessarily would have. Instead, she felt as if she stared into the soul of a wild and very smart animal.

The moment ended when Darius nodded.

“All right?” her husband asked her.

Belle nodded at him too, her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth. It occurred to her that Duvall was unalarmed by the demon because
he
was more powerful. That was a concept to wrap her head around as well. She was glad faeries didn’t have the ability to read thoughts. Duvall smiled reassuringly, patted her knee, and slid open the partition between them and the driver.

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