The little girl nodded. “I’m hungry.”
Other heads bobbed in agreement.
“Winky will bring down some food.” Vix left.
Suddenly, Noli felt herself shoved out of her body as the sprite took control. “Hi girls, I’m Noli. Why don’t we get you all cleaned up so we can have supper?”
Noli watched as the sprite paraded them up to the engine room where she’d secretly rigged a way for the heat of the engines to warm a barrel of water that was
“I only have one bar of soap, but we’ll make six wash cloths.” The sprite used her little knife to cut rags into pieces and gave one to each girl. “We have some nice warm water so let’s get everyone clean.” She helped the girls wash up, then dressed them, deftly using the fabric from her walls and hair ribbons. Actually, it wasn’t half bad. Still …
“Miss Noli, are you and the girls in there?” Winky said from the other side of the engine room door.
“We’re coming right now.” She led the girls back down the stairs, into the hold, and sat them down on crates. The sprite peered at the tray Winky carried. “What
Winky bobbed his head. “Oatmeal, Miss Noli, we weren’t planning on taking passengers.”
“Oh.”
Noli wanted to smack the sprite.
“I try my best, Miss Noli.” He gave her a little bob of the head as he helped her dish out six bowls of surprisingly unlumpy oatmeal.
“Could you try to find some spare blankets?” the sprite added.
“Of course, Miss Noli.” Winky left.
Noli watched in a combination of horror and boredom as the sprite fussed over the girls, made a bed for them out of blankets, and told strange stories that made no sense to Noli but had the girls rollicking with unladylike laughter.
Every time Noli fought for control, she lost. Fear consumed her. What if she couldn’t regain possession of the body? What if she never did and eventually her real self faded away, leaving only the sprite. No one would ever know something else resided in her body, that she wasn’t truly like this.
Finally, the little girl fell asleep. All six girls slept, a redhead snoring softly in the corner. Noli knew girls her age could often be found in joy houses, but this young? The tiny blonde was five, the eldest of the lot only ten. She’d like to convince herself they were destined for factories. Unfortunately, factories weren’t any nicer and probably wasn’t where they’d been headed.
The sprite yawned.
There were two? When were there two? This was getting to be too much. Noli sighed inwardly.
Perhaps in the morning she could wrest control of her own body back from the sprite.
Desperation to speak with Magnolia chased Kevighn like the air patrol pursued air pirates Kevighn crept into the engine room; his eyes fell on the flowers painted on the engine as he snuck past. It reminded him of Creideamh— his sister would do something like that, though she’d been a more accomplished painter.
The door wasn’t closed all the way and he pushed it open. “Magnolia?”
The only light came from the engine room, illuminating the sleeping Noli, sweetly cradled in the hammock. Her ears poked out slightly from her sleep cap, a doll cradled in her arms. She looked so …vulnerable when she slept.
“Magnolia? It’s Kevighn.” He stepped inside her tiny room, so he wasn’t obvious if anyone walked into the engine room, and closed the door behind him.
Her eyes flickered open. “I know you.”
Kevighn took a step backward, nearly crashing into the wall. What an odd thing to say. “Um, yes, you do.”
She sat up, green blanket slipping to reveal a white ruffled nightdress. “You’re fun. I like to have fun. It’s boring here.”
Magnolia flashed him a flirtatious smile—something
His stomach churned and the hairs on his arms stood up. Something wasn’t right. This wasn’t his little blossom. This wasn’t even the Magnolia he’d seen at supper.
“Who are you?” He peered into her steel eyes, which didn’t quite seem like hers. No. It was like someone else looked
“I’m Noli,” she giggled, tossing her head a little.
That wasn’t her laugh. It reminded him more of those vapid courtiers the high queen kept. Magnolia never tossed her head like that, either.
“Where’s Noli?” he demanded. This girl who looked like Magnolia wasn’t a changeling or simulacrum—but she wasn’t quite Magnolia either.
“I’m Noli.” She giggled again. “Oh, you mean the other Noli? The boring one? She’s sleeping.” Magnolia made an exasperated noise. “Finally.”
“What do you mean
His heart seized. “There are two of you in one body? How did
“Queen Tiana. One day I was just
Queen Tiana? How and why would she do
It wasn’t difficult to guess—the pointed ears, the beautiful body, the not-so-bright-but-chipper occupant.
“I’m a sprite, of course.” She giggled again.
Things started to make a sense. But only a little.
“Will you take me to the Otherworld? It’s so boring here.” She batted her eyelashes.
“I don’t think Stiofan would like that very much.” He kept his voice guarded.
“Why?” She cocked her head, eyes widening. “He broke the stone. It hurt. The other Noli’s no fun because she hurts so much.”
“Wait, Stiofan broke her stone?” His jaw dropped as his heart did a dance of joy. If Stiofan had broken it off with Magnolia that meant he still had a chance.
She nodded. “The other Noli thinks someone made him.”