toward the attache case. “A painting won’t fit in there.”

Jeff laughed. “It would if rolled. But no, he’s asked for … other things.”

Noli stopped in her tracks. “Museums. You stole things from museums. Los Angeles … Denver … ”

“Shhh,” he soothed. “You can’t have hysterics right here on the sidewalk.”

She turned to face him, eyes narrowing as she held up her parasol. “For your information, Jeffrey Cornelius Braddock, I don’t have hysterics. However, I do have a parasol and I know how to use it.”

His hands flew up in surrender. “Point taken. They’re just random bits of things. If they weren’t so old, they would be junk.” Jeff gestured to the elegant restaurant in front of them. “Let’s meet Kyran and get our money.”

They entered the place, which reminded her of the establishments they’d gone to with their parents, once. Places where men made business deals and women chatted with their friends over cups of tea or coffee. White linencovered tables filled with well-dressed people eating a late breakfast dotted the room.

“That’s Kyran over there.” Jeff gestured to a man with regal stature and a mop of dark blond curls sitting at one of the tables, reading the newspaper.

“Him?” Noli studied the man from a distance as she smoothed her skirt. “He looks familiar.” The man looked up from his paper, but not directly at them. Noli caught a glimpse of eyes green like oak leaves. V’s eyes. She sucked in a sharp breath. “That’s who we’re meeting?”

“Do you know him?” The corners of his lips turned down.

Noli gulped. She didn’t know him, but she knew exactly who he was. “His name isn’t Kyran. It’s Brogan.”

As in Uncle Brogan, V and James’ uncle, the current king of the earth court. Her chest tightened. Why was her brother consorting with the likes of him?

“I hardly expected him to use his real name,” Jeff whispered. “Wait—how do you know that? Was he the one who kidnapped you?”

“We can’t do business with him, we can’t,” Noli hissed, snatching the attache case out of Jeff’s hand. She ran out of the restaurant and down the street.

And right into someone.

“Slow down.” Kevighn’s arms wrapped around her.

“Kevighn, what are you doing here?” Noli made a face as she stared up into his familiar piercing yellow eyes.

“Following you. What are you doing?”

Kevighn was following her? That didn’t actually surprise her since he hadn’t gotten to say farewell aboard the ship. Also, he was the one person who might be able to assist her with her current predicament.

Noli held up the attache case. “Jeff is doing business with King Brogan.”

“What?” Kevighn dragged her into a space between two buildings where they were out of the way of those going about their business.

“He calls himself Kyran but he’s not, he’s King Brogan and he’s been having Jeff steal things from museums.” Noli examined the outside of the attache case. “What do you suppose they stole?”

“Jeff’s doing business with Brogan—and he’s calling himself Kyran?” Kevighn rubbed his chin, the sun glinting off his black hair which hung loose instead of its usual tail. “This is serious.”

Parasol tucked under her arm, she flipped the latch, and opened the case. “Oh, Kevighn, look.” She held up a bit of gold. The sun caught on it and she could make out the partial design, which caused her to suck in a sharp breath. “This was the piece from the museum in Denver. This is the high court sigil, isn’t it?”

Kevighn leaned in to examine it, standing far too close for polite comfort. Then again, he always did take any liberty he could.

“Yes, this is.” He stoked the piece with his finger. “What is Brogan up to and why is he using the name Kyran? The real Kyran won’t like that very much at all.”

“We can’t give this to him.” Closing her eyes, she held the piece in her hand. “There is so much magic in this.” Her voice shook as the power from it coursed through her. Tell me your secrets, she begged. All she felt was the hum of magic under her skin.

“Noli?” Kevighn sorted through the pieces in the attache case. “I think I know what this is. It’s incomplete, but you’re right. We can’t give this to Brogan.”

“What is it?” It couldn’t be anything good—not if Brogan was involved.

“An artifact that has been gone from the Otherworld so long it’s presumed to be only myth and legend,” he breathed. “If half the stories are true, it’s probably best if it remained out of the hands of people like him.”

Noli’s belly twisted. No, not good at all.

“What do you think you’re doing, Noli? This is no time for your antics.” Jeff appeared in front of them, a deep frown on his face. He did a double take. “Mr. Silver, why are you here?”

“Magnolia, Jeff has been doing business with Otherworld folk,” Kevighn told him. “Though I’m certain he has no idea who Brogan is or what this is.”

All the air left Noli’s body making her feel as if she would suffocate. Jeff knew about the Otherworld? Her eyes widened as she looked up at her brother, suddenly feeling betrayed even though she was just as guilty.

“My word, you do know about the Otherworld.” Jeff’s jaw dropped.

“Um, yes, I … I do—and we can’t give this to Brogan. We can’t. Do you know who and what he is?” She waved her parasol at him. It didn’t matter to her what the artifact did. It was the principle of the matter. She didn’t approve of doing business with people who betrayed their own family for power.

“It’s just a business transaction,” Jeff soothed, taking a step back to avoid being hit by her parasol. “What he does with it is of little importance.”

“Yes it is, because he’s up to no good.” Kevighn held up another piece from the case and examined it in the mid-morning light streaming between the two buildings.

“The Otherworld is none of my concern. I’m just in it for the money—and if I don’t give it to him, we don’t get our money. No money means an unhappy crew.” Jeff gave her a firm look as if she were still a little girl and had taken his hammer without permission.

Her arms fell to her side, the piece still in her hand. “The Otherworld is your concern. It’s symbiotic. If something happens there, it affects our world as well.”

Jeff laughed. “And I suppose you’re going to tell me that aether is really faery magic.”

“But it is.” Noli just stared at her brother. How could he think this was all just business? Or a game. The Otherworld played for keeps.

“Oh, you’re serious.” Jeff deflated. “Wait, isn’t this some sort of odd coincidence? You know Kyran, Mr. Silver being here at this particular moment?”

Kevighn glanced at her in a way that seemed far to intimate all things considered. “Everything is the will of the Bright Lady.”

Jeff’s hand went to his face. “You’re one of them as well?

King Brogan can’t get his hands on this. There’s a reason it was broken up and hidden throughout the mortal realm. Just the fact he’d paying people to track the pieces down is troublesome.” Kevighn’s eyes flashed with passion.

“Do you think he’s doing it by himself or do you think he is in partnership?” Noli couldn’t suggest out loud that Brogan and Tiana were in this together, but it made sense.

“I don’t know.” He turned to Jeff. “Let me have this and I’ll get you your money.”

“Who are you going to sell it to, Kevighn?” Noli remembered his exile.

“No one. I’m going to dispose of these pieces. Thank the Bright Lady they’re not all here, but who knows how many he already has. As for the money, I know someone who would gladly pay to ensure it remains out of the wrong hands.” He returned the piece to the case.

“Who?” Jeff eyed Kevighn and the case as if at any moment he’d snatch it from him.

“The real Kyran.” Kevighn snapped the attache case shut. “He wouldn’t want Brogan to have these—he could use it to destroy the very fabric of the Otherworld.”

“Wait, are you trying to tell me that this is some powerful faery artifact, one that could start a war?” Jeff’s

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