Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
mine on yours,â I told Jesse. âSamuel, can you see anything?â
âI can now,â he said. âItâs getting lighter ahead.â
âLighterâ was a relative term, but the ten stairs we went down I could see. The stairs ended in a dirt tunnel that was lit by gems embedded in the ground that were as big around as oranges. The ceiling of the tunnel was about six inches lower than Samuel was tall, and the roof and sides were thick with tree roots.
âThere arenât any trees above us,â I said. âAnd even if there were, weâve come down a long way past where Iâd have thought there would be roots.â
âShe has a forest lord in her court,â said Ariana, reaching to the side where strings of roots made a rough curtain for the dirt wall beyond. The roots moved toward her, caressing her fingers briefly before falling back where they had been.
âWhat kind of fae are you, Ariana?â asked Jesse. âAre you a forest lord, too? Or a gremlin like Zee, because you can work silver?â
âThere are no others like Zee,â she told us. âHe is unique. Almost all fae can work with silver to one extent or anotherâsilver loves fae magic. But you are right: there are iron- kissed fae in my background, and steel holds no terrors for me.â
We were talking quietly, but I wasnât too worried about being discovered. There was a feeling of . . . emptiness here that told me that there was no life other than the roots that tangled in my hair and tripped my feet.
âWeââ I stopped, remembering that I wasnât supposed to discuss anything about the fairy queen. Had I already broken my word? Did it matter when we were storming the castle?
âJesse,â I said, deciding to play it safe, âwe havenât planned anything at all about the rescue.â
âThereâs no planning when youâre running through Elphame,â said Samuel, who was walking bent over, with one hand up to ward off the roots. âItâs not that kind of place. Ariana will lead us to her grandson and Gabriel, and weâll try to get out by coping with anything that happens along the way.â
âThat sounds . . . simple,â I said.
âIt could be simple,â Ariana told me. âShe cannot be expecting visitorsâthere just arenât very many fae who could open a back entrance into a fairy queenâs lair. Thralls will not react to usâthey know nothing and are not much more than automata who follow the queenâs orders. We may be able to find Phin and Gabriel and leave with them before anyone realizes there is something wrong.â
âShould we have broughtââ Arianaâs fingers touched my lips.
âBest we not talk about what that one so desires in her lair,â she told me. âI expect she might hear that. And no. It is powerful, and even if it will not do as she wants, it will still do great harm in the wrong hands.â
âAll right,â I said.
Samuel raised his head. âBest we not talk anymore at all. Iâm starting to pick up the scent of people now.â
I could smell them, too, once heâd pointed it out. We were coming upon more-traveled ways. The loose dirt of the floor became packed earth, and the roots thinned and were replaced with rough-cut square blocks as the dirt floor became cobbles, and the ceiling rose so Samuel could stand up straight again.
There were already other tunnels joining ours.
I caught the scent before Samuel, but I think it was only because the woman came upon us from behind, and I was walking last. It didnât matter, though, because I only had time to whirl around, and she was upon us.
She wore a torn jacket and filthy jeans and carried a large wooden cutting board in both her hands. She walked right into me and bounced off. When she tried to walk around me, I blocked her a second time.
âTake this to the kitchen,â she said, without looking up at me. She shifted her weight from one foot to the other, all of her attention on the board she held. Her hair hung in ragged clumps, and there was dirt on her knuckles. Around her neck was a thin silver collar. âThe kitchen, child. The kitchen. Take this to the kitchen.â
I moved out of her way, and she all but sprinted past us.
âSheâs not taking care of her thralls,â said Ariana disapprovingly.
âThrall?â asked
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