When I turned back she was hissing and spitting while trying to break the confinement spell. The problem was it bound her like a constrictor, more struggling meant tighter binding. “Stop struggling before you hurt yourself.”

Olan waddled into the room. I had left the door open so I could toss her out when I was done with her. “What did you do to piss her off?” He asked.

“As a wild guess I would say it has something to do with the Sidhe.”

Princess Elizabeth was now whimpering because the invisibles bonds of the spell cut into her arms where she’d continued to struggle despite my warning. I flicked my fingers and loosened the bonds a little. “Don’t tighten them again, or I will leave them.”

Olan circled the fairy clucking. “Look at her; she hasn’t eaten for a long stretch. She is all bones and wings.”

He was right. What the hell was going on? I hoped the Sidhe hadn’t upped the ante. So far I hadn’t believed they were trying to kill the Real Folk, but that they just didn’t care about the repercussions. Now, I wondered if maybe they were trying to destroy the entire fairy species. “Why haven’t you eaten?”

She just spat.

“Did the Sidhe have anything to do with it?”

No response.

I shut the front door. “We need to go downstairs. I have some things down there that will make her talk.”

Olan shook his feathers and walked over to me. “I didn’t think you be the kind of wizard who would stoop to ‘techniques’ to get information.” His voice was low.

“I’m not. I have a spell that will make her answer our questions and not hurt her. When we get information, I’ll remove the spells and let her go. Or rather, I’ll put her outside and then remove the spells.”

Princess Elizabeth was staring at me and trembling, I felt like an asshole, but her fear will make the spell work better. I reminded myself I really wasn’t going to hurt her. I picked her up, she weighed so little I could hold her in one hand.

“I am off to do some more research.” Olan called as he fluttered outside.

I could have used Olan when I cast the spell, but we did need to split up to get more information, so I nodded and took Princess Elizabeth downstairs.

Ten minutes after I cast the spell, I noticed that she kept nodding off between questions. It wasn’t because of the spell. It was because she didn’t have any reserves of energy. She was only a few steps away from death.

“Princess, why are you so thin?”

“I am being punished. I failed to get the lotion.” Her voice was barely audible. I fetched the bottle of honey from my kitchen. Fairies practically lived on sugar. Releasing the binding, I poured honey onto a plate. “I said I was being punished. I cannot eat that until I am forgiven.”

“What do you know about this problem?”

“Only that babies stopped and the other Real Folk couldn’t help. Then the Sidhe came to tell us they would fix it.”

“They have an amulet.” I reminded myself not to give away too much information. “It has something to do with your problem.”

“Yes,” she choked out the words, eyes on the honey. “Fionuir painted a spell on it. Then we had no babies.”

That got my attention. If Princess Elizabeth had seen something, maybe she held the clue to breaking the spell. “Did you see what happened?”

“No. My lover did. He said she put some brown liquid on the amulet and it glowed.”

I considered asking if she would take me to her lover, then realized she’d probably try to kill me the minute I released her. “Why are you trying to kill me?”

“You are stopping the Sidhe. If I kill you, then we can continue to breed. And, maybe I will be forgiven.”

“Why did you fail?”

She squirmed in the binding. I loosened the spell a little when I saw the raw wounds on her arms. Her gaze never left the honey. But I knew she couldn’t eat it. Fairies are stubborn about their ethics. Rose fairies were the worst. If I forced her to eat, she would be shamed and maybe killed by her clan.

I waited a few minutes. “Do the other fairies know why you failed?” Tears were sliding down her cheeks. “Is that why you are being punished?”

She sobbed in a breath and nodded.

I knew she would tell me now. That’s how the spell worked; if you could get one hard truth out of the subject then the others would follow. “Tell me what happened. Maybe I can help.”

Now it was time for patience while she fought the compulsion to tell me. If I spoke to her before she answered, I would have to start again. I’m not sure she would survive long enough for that. If she spoke, I could cast a spell to preserve her until I could solve this problem.

She turned her head away from the plate of honey, a grimace pulled at her mouth but she tucked her head into her shoulder. If it weren’t for the trembling of her body, I might have thought she was sleeping.

I’d left a small window open upstairs so I wasn’t surprised when Olan swooped into the room while Princess Elizabeth struggled against her compulsion. I motioned with my head for him to land near me. When he was on the ground, he looked at Princess.

“Did she tell you what you need?”

“Not all of it. But we were right, Fionuir cast a spell on the amulet, painted it with brown liquid.”

“Why is she biting her lips?”

“There’s something more and she’s trying not to tell me. She will.”

Olan gave that little bird shrug. “If she doesn’t know what the spell is, why bother?”

“She failed to get the potion. I figure it’s important to find out why. Maybe we can just break the routine enough to make the Sidhe bored. Did you get anything on your travels?”

“Yes. There is a pattern. My source says the Sidhe need a sacrifice every three days at minimum. He didn’t know why but he heard them talking after one of the killings.”

“Who’s your source?’ I watched Princess. She had stopped struggling and was listening to us. Maybe she figured she could find a way to try again. Then her shoulders slumped.

Olan fluttered his wings. “You won’t know my source, but he comes when humans die violently.”

I put my finger to my lips and then pointed at Princess.

Tears dripping from her chin she sobbed again before speaking. “I failed because I couldn’t kill the human they picked for me. It was a child.”

“They pick the victim?” That was something I hadn’t considered. “Do you know why?”

“Something about the energy they need.” Her voice was fading, there wasn’t much more time to get information.

“Do you know why they need it so often?”

I could see it was taking her longer to find the energy to speak, so I gathered my preserving spell while I waited.

“To keep the spell fresh without using their own energy.” Her eyes closed and I cast my spell. She would stay alive but immobile for at least a month.

“She probably knows more,” Olan said, hopping onto her lap. “You could have asked another question.”

“I didn’t want to kill her. I don’t need a stain like that on my energy.” I wasn’t usually in a position to consider violating the spirit wizard’s oath. I didn’t use sacrifice in spells, and until now, I have never felt the need to end someone’s life. “If I am going to kill, it will be Fionuir, not some poor victim.”

“She would have killed a human to breed.” Olan croaked. “These fairies don’t value humans at all.”

“Olan, that is her problem to deal with not mine. But I will remind you that she didn’t kill the child. Wouldn’t kill the child, and she is suffering for that mercy.”

He hopped back down to the floor. “She would have if it hadn’t been a child. The children are the only ones who still believe in fairies.”

I’d had it with his attitude. “Maybe if your damn humans cared about something other than themselves they

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