I replayed what Oliver had always told me. His relationship with my mother had been brief, and he hadn’t even known she was pregnant until shortly before she gave birth. She died not long after I was born. It all happened during the turbulent period after the Cataclysm, in which there was massive upheaval in Faerie as well as across the entire supernatural world. I was trying to reassure myself, but it wasn’t working very well. There were an awful lot of gaps in Oliver’s story.
When we neared Marisol’s office, the page who’d delivered the message was waiting outside the closed door.
Oliver slowed, and I did the same. He leaned in close to speak in my ear. “If she wants to know why I brought you, it’s because you’re the one who rescued Nicole. Don’t offer up any information unless she asks, and if you do have to answer any questions, keep it brief.”
I gave a slight nod, and then we continued on.
“Lady Lothlorien wants to see you alone,” the page said to Oliver. Then with a narrowing of his eyes he turned his gaze to me. “She’ll have to wait in the anteroom.”
Oliver brushed past the page, who went into the small sitting room outside of Marisol’s office. I caught a brief glimpse of the Lady of the stone fortress as she let Oliver in. Her eyes flicked to me. Her grim expression didn’t change.
The page stayed in the room with me with a look on his face like he expected me to try to swipe one of the crystal candlesticks from the mantle.
“I don’t need a babysitter,” I said.
“Nevertheless, I’ll stay.” He crossed his arms. “Lady Lothlorien wouldn’t appreciate any eavesdropping from an uninvited visitor.”
He placed a not-so-subtle emphasis on the word “uninvited.”
“Eavesdropping? What is this, Unseelie court?” I scoffed. “I’m not trying to eavesdrop.”
I turned away from the page and briefly pushed the heels of my hands into my tired eyes. I wasn’t even sure why I was engaging with him. It wasn’t the type of thing I would normally do, but I was drained and on edge.
A moment later, the inner door to Marisol’s office opened, and Oliver beckoned me inside.
Marisol was seated behind her desk, and she briefly closed her eyes and rubbed one temple with her fingertips before folding her hands on her desk and pinning me with her gaze.
“How is the girl doing?” she asked.
“She’s quite shaken. It looked like she hadn’t been captive on the Duergar palace grounds for long, and I think she’s still in shock,” I hesitated. “And, Nicole is very old for a changeling.”
Marisol’s forehead lined with concern. “How old?”
I shrugged a shoulder. “I didn’t ask her, but she’s about my age,” choosing my words carefully.
I could almost sense Oliver tensing beside me.
She let out a breath. “Oh, that is quite old for a homecoming. Probably one of the oldest ever in Faerie. It will make the transition much more difficult.”
Marisol’s concern was almost maternal, but she spoke as if Nicole had already made the decision to swear to the Stone Order. That wasn’t necessarily how things would play out. Nicole would be given a choice, after the requisite time period. If she chose not to swear fealty to a kingdom or the Order, she would never be allowed to return to Faerie, and she’d lose any magic she might have developed. If she did swear, she could live in Faerie or on the other side like me, but she’d be obligated to the kingdom she was sworn to just as I was obligated to the Stone Order. Nineteen times out of twenty with changelings, they chose to swear to a kingdom and embrace their Fae heritage. The one out of twenty? Those were almost always older changelings. And to us, “older” meant anyone over seventeen.
Marisol would be doing everything possible to make sure Nicole decided to become one of us in a permanent sense. Marisol needed numbers in the Order.
But first we had to contend with King Periclase’s accusation.
“We need to get her magic working,” Marisol said. “It will help us tremendously if she’s able to demonstrate stone armor. I’ll get her working with Fern right away.”
Marisol made a few taps and swipes on the tablet next to her elbow.
“That’s not going to prove she isn’t Periclase’s daughter, though,” Oliver said.
“True, but without a demonstration of New Garg abilities, we have no way of claiming she’s one of us,” Marisol said. “And on the chance that she is Periclase’s daughter, if she can form stone armor she can still swear fealty to the Stone Order.”
Discovery of parentage worked a little differently in Faerie than on the other side of the hedge. In the human world, a simple blood test for maternity or paternity would settle questions like this one. Those tests didn’t work on Fae. There was a magic-based test, but the only person who could perform it was nearly impossible to reach and even more difficult to persuade into actually doing it—and trying to do so was taking your life into your hands. Melusine was one of the Old Ones like Oberon, and one of very few living Fae witches, a woman with full Fae magic and full human magic.
Marisol shifted her blue gemstone eyes to me. “You will keep in contact with Nicole. It will help her to have someone around her age who’s spent so much time in the Earthly realm to talk to. Plus, you’re the one who rescued her.”
My lips parted. It was an order from my sovereign, and I couldn’t refuse it. “Of course. But there’s another small matter I need to attend to immediately.”
“Oh?”
I tried not to wince as I spoke. “There’s a woman in our jail under my accusation. I need to question her. She’s, uh, Periclase’s bastard daughter.”
Again, the pursed-lip look from Marisol.
“What’s the charge?” she asked.
“Attempted murder. In the netherwhere.”
Marisol’s entire face and upper body went rigid. “She did what?”
“Bryna, unclaimed bastard daughter of King Periclase, sent a wraith to kill me while I was in the void,” I said. “I later killed her wraith. Or destroyed it. Whatever it is you do to end wraiths.”
Oliver shot me a look, and I shut up, belatedly remembering his warning to keep my answers short. I also realized he hadn’t known anything about Bryna and the wraith.
Marisol took a noisy breath in through her nose. “Well, that’s not going to help any negotiations with the Duergar, but that’s a very serious crime. Do you plan to pursue it in the High Court?”
I managed not to snort. For the love of Oberon, no. Some torturously lengthy Faerie legal process was the last thing I wanted to waste my time on.
I shook my head. “Not if I can get the information I need out of her. It’s related to a Guild assignment.”
“Good,” she said, nodding. “Your mercy in this case will make us appear generous.”
I tamped down my annoyance. Everything always had to be political with Marisol. I held a neutral expression and gave a tiny inclination of my head, knowing I had to play along.
“If you can conclude your business and release her before the twenty-four-hour deadline, that would benefit the situation even more,” she said.